Sugato De

10-7-01

Period 6/7

Pearl Prynne- A Blessing And A Curse

“This child hath come from the hand of the almighty, to work in many ways upon her heart.  It was meant for a blessing, for the one blessing of her life! It was meant, doubtless, for a retribution too, a torture to be felt at many an unthought of moment; a pang, as sting, an ever-recurring agony in the midst of a troubled joy" (Hawthorne 105).  This, as Arthur Dimmesdale poignantly and almost prophetically expresses in the preliminary scenes of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, was the role of the strikingly beautiful yet fatally elfish Pearl, the child borne of his and Hester Prynne’s forbidden passion.  In the midst of the already troubled and sinful life of her mother, Peal is the cause of her further pain, agony and yet also of Hester’s happiness and sense of worth. While forever a tormentor to her mother, Pearl was also her savior, while a reminder of her guilt, she proved to be a promoter of honesty and true virtue, and while an embodiment of her parents’ worst qualities, she was the true reflection of a troubled heart.  

Pearl was at times a literal thorn in the flesh, bringing trouble, heartache, and frustration to her mother, yet while at the same time serving a constructive purpose lying far beyond the daily provocations of her childish impishness.  Besides being Hester’s savior, so to speak, from temptation and the wild passion her nature tended toward, Pearl was a perpetual reminder of her mother’s ignominious sin. However, despite the guilt and shame that this incurred, it was a kind of blessing to Hester, for it strengthened her character by forcing her to confront her sin and be true to herself and others about it. Pearl reminded Hester of her sin in many ways, most powerfully by her fascination with the scarlet letter. Hawthorne notes that instead of some comforting aspect about her mother, “the first thing the infant was conscious of was the infamous letter, and when she noticed it, she reached out her infant fist and touched it with a disturbing smile and gaze” which to her mother was like "the stroke of sudden death" (Hawthorne 89).  As Pearl grew, this fascination only increased, for when she began to make connections between aspects in her world, she began to persistently ask Hester why she wore the scarlet letter and her reverend held his hand over his heart. She even makes a letter out of seaweed and places it on her bosom, which greatly disturbs her parents’.  In the recesses of the forest, the impish child again seemingly displays a cold and malicious heart.  When Hester frees herself for a brief moment from the letter that had stained he being, the child cannot accept her mother and wails until the scarlet letter is restored to its place.  In the closing moments of the episode, Pearl embraces her mother and specifically kisses the scarlet letter, prompting her mother to exclaim “That was not kind! When thou hast shown me a little love, thou hast mockest me” (Hawthorne 200).  Thus does the child once again mercilessly force on her mother the same of the sin that she has committed, while also portraying a hollow duty partnered with a youthful innocence  

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         While from the outset of the novel, Hester is shamed by having a baby as tangible evidence of her sin and shame, the responsibility of caring for Pearl and raising her with love and wisdom serves to calm the defiant, destructive passion of Hester’s nature and save her from its wild, desperate promptings.  This sentiment is poignantly portrayed in Hester’s visit the governor’s mansion, in which she is forced to plea for the right to keep her child.  “She is my happiness! --She is my torture, none the less! Pearl keeps me here in life! Pearl punishes me too! ...

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