The Scarlet Letter Packet

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The Scarlet

Letter
by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Student Name________________
Period_________
Advanced Composition & Novel
Mrs. Lutes

All exercises1 in this packet are intended for you to master your own interpretation by
the time we complete the novel. Do not write responses in this packet. You are
responsible for creating and maintaining a typed analytical journal as you read. It must
be well organized with categories listed (Prereading, What Does a Symbol Mean,
Symbols Chart, etc.) All student work should be completed thoughtfully, thoroughly,
independently, and ethically. Students can expect to have their work in progress
collected each day, stamped for credit, and returned. At the end of the unit, students
will turn in all completed work and will be graded on sophistication of thought (high
level of analysis and justification with textual evidence), ethics (all work is original),
organization (responses are correctly labeled and neat), and timely completion (all parts
are accounted for and stamped).
Prereading
Respond thoughtfully to the following questions.
1. Have you ever heard someone talk about being branded with a scarlet letter or heard
someone called a scarlet woman? What might this mean?
2. Write about a time when you felt left out, shunned, cast aside, or in some other way
alienated. How did you handle it? How did you overcome it? What lasting effects
did it have on you? Explain.
3. The truth will out, is a belief espoused by many. Do you believe the truth eventually
comes to light?
4. What would be your response if you found out that your partner had committed
adultery? Would you want to seek revenge? Would you?
5. Many people are denied jobs, homes, even opportunities for friendship, because they
have been found guilty of a betrayal. How long should a person be punished for a
mistake?
6. How does todays society respond to guilt, sin, adultery? You might draw on
television shows (such as reality TV); governmental and religious arenas; or
interviews with fellow students, ministers, adults, etc. in order to formulate a
response.
7. Respond to the following quote by Socrates: The unexamined life is not worth
living.
8. Respond to the following quote by Anne Frank: Laziness may appear attractive, but
work gives satisfaction.
9. Respond to the following quote by Thomas Szasz: Punishment is now
unfashionablebecause it creates moral distinctions among men, which, to the
democratic mind, are odious. We prefer a meaningless collective guilt to a
meaningful individual responsibility.
10. Respond to the following quote by Margaret of Navarre: Man is wisewhen he
recognizes no greater enemy than himself.
2

11. Respond to the following quote by Henrik Ibsen: The strongest man in the world is
he who stands most alone.
12. (Optional) As a social experiment, cut out the letter P (for plagiarism) from a
piece of red paper or felt and embellish it and wear it on your chest around school
for a week. Take note of how other people react. Log your feelings about the way
you are looked at, talked about, treated.

Vocabulary
The Scarlet Letter is full of rich, complex vocabulary that you may not be particularly
familiar with. Hawthornes command of language and descriptive word choice makes
The Scarlet Letter a classic American novel. Use this list to enrich your comprehension
as you read. You might see these words appear on your pop quizzes.
Chapters 1-3
1. beadle (n.): a minor church official who ushers or helps preserve order during
services
2. contumely (n.): insulting display of contempt in word or action; a humiliating insult
3. ignominy (n.): total loss of dignity; disgrace; shame
4. inauspicious (adj.): unfavorable; boding ill
5. mien (n.): a persons general appearance or carriage; often indicates a persons mood
or state of mind
6. physiognomies (n.): faces; the outward appearance of things
7. pillory (n.): a wooden framework with holes for securing the head and hands,
designed to expose a criminal to public ridicule or abuse
8. remonstrance (n.): an argument in protest of; complaint; objection
9. sagacity (n.): wisdom, profound knowledge and insight to the world
10. vie (v.): to compete; to struggle for dominance or control
Chapters 4-6
1. anathemas (n.): curses; denunciations; bad wishes
2. draught (n.): a drink; a dose; that which is taken in by drinking or inhaling
3. efficacy (n.): effectiveness; capacity for producing effects
4. expostulation (n.): complaint; earnest protest
5. gesticulation (n.): an animated or exercised gesture; gestures made in an excited
manner especially with or instead of speech
6. paramour (n.): illicit lover; a beloved person
7. phantasmagoric (adj.): displaying an optical illusion; imagining changing scenes
8. quaff (v.): to drink heartily
9. sable (adj. or n.): dark and somber; mourning garments
10. uncongenial (adj.): disagreeable; not compatible; not pleasing; not well-suited
Chapters 7-9
1. cabalistic (adj.): mystic; occult
2. chirurgical (adj.): surgical
3. contagion (n.): the ready transmission or spread, as of an attitude, idea or emotion
from person to person; harmful or undesirable contact or influence
4. deportment (n.): demeanor; conduct; behavior
5. despondent (adj.): dispirited; feeling or showing profound hopelessness;
discouraged
6. emaciated (adj.): gradually wasted away; abnormally thin, marked by lack of
3

nutrition or disease
7. erudition (n.): knowledge acquired by study or research; learning; scholarship
8. imperious (adj.): dictatorial; urgent; commanding
9. leech (n.): a person who clings to another for personal gain; parasite; also a name for
a doctor in the 1600s; (v.): to cling and to feed upon so as to drain
10. pestilence (n.): a deadly epidemic disease; something harmful or evil

Chapters 10-12
1. demerits (n.): punishments for wrongdoing
2. ethereal (adj.): light or airy; tenuous; extremely delicate or refined
3. expiation (n.): the means by which atonement or reparation is made
4. inextricable (adj.): incapable of being disentangled, undone, loosed, or solved;
hopelessly intricate, involved, or perplexing
5. inimical (adj.): harmful; hostile; unfriendly
6. ominous (adj.): foreboding; threatening; portending to evil or harm
7. portent (n.): ominous significance; an indication or omen of something momentous
about to happen
8. scurrilous (adj.): insulting; offensive; vulgar; grossly or obscenely abusive
9. somnambulism (n.): sleepwalking; performing acts while asleep
10. zenith (n.): the highest point or state; culmination; the point in the sky directly
above the observer
Chapters 13-15
1. asperity (n.): harshness; severity in tone; roughness
2. austerity (n.): stern coldness in appearance and manner; without excess or
ornamentation
3. despotic (adj.): holding absolute power; autocratic; tyrannical
4. effluence (n.): something that flows out; emanation; outward expression
5. enigma (n.): a person of contradicting or puzzling character; riddle; problem
6. gibe (n.): mocking words; taunts
7. innate (adj.): existing in one from birth; inborn; native; originating in something;
not learned
8. petulant (adj.): showing sudden impatience or irritation
9. proffered (v.): offered or proposed for ones acceptance or rejection
10. requital (n.): a return or reward for service; kindness
Chapters 16-18
1. colloquy (n.): a dialogue; conversational exchange; conference
2. consecration (n.): the act of giving sacramental character; dedication to the service
and worship of God; sacredness
3. denizen (n.): an inhabitant; resident
4. dryad (n.): a deity or nymph of the woods
5. harrowed (v.): disturbed keenly or painfully; distressed the mind
6. hillock (n.): a little hill
7. loquacity (n.): talkativeness; chattiness; state of talking freely
8. meditative (adj.): contemplative; deeply thoughtful
9. transmuting (v.): transforming; changing from one form to another
10. vestige (n.): a mark, trace or visible evidence of something that is no longer present
or in existence
Chapters 19-21
4

1.
2.
3.
4.

depredation (n.): the act of preying upon or plundering; robbery; ravage


disquietude (n.): uneasiness; the state of disturbance
jocularity (n.): state or quality of being facetious or joking; a funny remark
languor (n.): physical weakness or faintness; lack of energy; lack of spirit;
sluggishness
5. obeisance (n.): a bow or curtsey; a movement of the body expressing deep respect
6. potentate (n.): one who possesses power or dominion; monarch; ruler
7. prattle (v.): to utter by chattering or babbling; to talk in a simple-minded or foolish
way
8. preternatural (adj.): out of the natural or ordinary course of nature; abnormal;
exceptional
9. uncouth (adj.): unmannerly; awkward; clumsy; of ungraceful appearance
10. vicissitude (n.): a change or variation in the course of something
Chapters 22-24
1. apotheosize (v.): to glorify or exalt someone or something; deify
2. audacity (n.): boldness or daring without regard for personal safety
3. contiguous (adj.): touching; in close proximity with; close by
4. erratic (adj.): eccentric; deviating from the proper or usual course in conduct or
opinion
5. gait (n.): a manner of walking, stepping, or running
6. indefatigable (adj.): incapable of being tired out; not tiring
7. morion (n.): helmet worn by common soldiers in the 16 th and 17th centuries
8. necromancy (n.): the art of divination through communication with the dead;
witchcraft
9. pathos (n.): pity or compassion
10. repugnance (n.): strong distaste or aversion; objection; antipathy
Hawthornes Words of Wisdom
We will devise a class list of Hawthornes words of wisdom. As you read, select and
mark passages that you would like to contribute to our class list. Examples include:

To the untrue man, the whole universe is false (142).


No man for any considerable period can wear one face to himself and another to
the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true
(203).

Be prepared to discuss these quotations in class.


What Does a Symbol Mean?
Read the following excerpt about symbols, and answer the questions. Be prepared for
class discussion.
Identifying Symbols
Learning to recognize symbols is largely a matter of using our intuition
and our background in literature. We should remember first of all that anything
may be a symbol, that a symbol is any sign that has acquired extra meaning. It
may be an object, a gesture, an incident, a person, a plot, a color, a sound, a
pattern or sequence of actionanything that reminds us of something else that in
turn seems applicable to the text before us. The word may is crucial. Although
we must develop a sensitivity to the possibility that anything unusual may be

symbolic, we must refrain from concluding that everything unusual is symbolic.


A balance between sensitivity to the possibility of symbols and a commonsense
approach to the basic meaning of the text is the best guide. 2

1. What do you already know about symbols in general?


2. How does Roland Bartels explanation add to that understanding?
3. What should you do in order to determine whether or not some thing, some person,
some action, etc., might be symbolically used in a work of fiction?
4. Explain what Bartel means by saying: The word may is crucial. Although we must
develop a sensitivity to the possibility that anything unusual may be symbolic, we
must refrain from concluding that everything unusual is symbolic. How can this
best be done?
5. Based on this reading, draw up a list of criteria that you will use as a guide to
determine what the symbols are in The Scarlet Letter.
Symbols Chart
As you read The Scarlet Letter, complete the following log based on the symbols
assigned to you. This is a long-term project which you will complete every night with
your assigned reading. I will check it each day and stamp it for new entries completed.
The information you record in your chart will culminate in another activity when we
complete the novel. Be disciplined and thoughtful in your work.
Chapter

Page

Symbol: Darkness/Light
Description

Chapter

Page

Symbol: The letter A


Description

Significance

Chapter

Page

Symbol: Roses/Rosebush
Description

Significance

Chapter

Page

Symbol: Clothing
Description

Significance

Significance

Symbol: Characters Names (Hester, Pearl, Dimmesdale, Chillingworth)


Chapter Page
Description
Significance

Character Study
As you read The Scarlet Letter, complete the following log based on the characters
assigned to you. You will study each character in detail. This is a long-term project
which you will complete every night with your assigned reading. I will check it each day
and stamp it for new entries completed. The information you record in your chart will
culminate in another activity when we complete the novel. Be disciplined and
thoughtful in your work.
Chapter
/ Page

Character: Hester Prynne


Significant Action /
Insight into Character
Significant Statement
Provided by Action
and Statement

Personal
Reaction to
Character

Chapter
/ Page

Character: Pearl
Significant Action /
Insight into Character
Significant Statement
Provided by Action
and Statement

Personal
Reaction to
Character

Chapter
/ Page

Character: Roger Chillingworth


Significant Action /
Insight into Character
Significant Statement
Provided by Action
and Statement

Personal
Reaction to
Character

Chapter
/ Page

Character: Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale


Significant Action /
Insight into Character
Significant Statement
Provided by Action
and Statement

Personal
Reaction to
Character

Then and Now


7

Review chapters 1-6 of The Scarlet Letter. Examine how Hester is punished for her
crime of adultery, how she is judged by the people in the crowd as she stands with Pearl
on the scaffold, and how she judges herself. Think about instances in todays society in
which someone is revealed to have committed adultery. Write a well-though-out essay
comparing Hesters punishment and treatment in her Puritanical society with how an
individual would be treated and punished in todays society. Consider how these
similarities and differences impact the life of the adulterer (and in the case of Hester,
impact the life of the adulterers child). Also, consider how the differences and
similarities reflect society, both then and now.
Rembrandt the Painter
The following definitions are taken from www.artlex.com. Notice how each of these
elements are used in the paintings.
a. Nuance: a subtle difference, distinction or variation; a subtle quality. Or a sensibility
to, awareness of, or ability to express delicate gradations of a meaning (as of an
attitude or expression) or of a form (as of its values, textures, or shades, tints, or
tones of color, etc.)
b. Chiaroscuro: the term refers to the fine art painting modeling effect of using a
strong contrast between light and dark to give the illusion of depth or threedimensionality.
c. Hue: The name of any color as found in its pure state in the spectrum or rainbow, or
that aspect of any color.
d. Tint: A soft and light colorone to which white has been added. For example, white
added to green makes a lighter green tint.
e. Contrast: A large difference between two things; for example, light and shadow.
This term refers to a way of juxtaposing elements of art to stress the differences
between them.
f. Value: refers to the luminance or luminositythe lightness or darkness of a color.
g. Shading: showing change from light to dark or dark to light in a picture by
darkening areas that would be shadowed and leaving other areas light. Blending of
one value into another is sometimes called feathering. Shading is often used to
produce illusions of dimension and depth.
As you study some of Rembrandts paintings, consider the following questions about
technique and effect.
1. How does Rembrandt use lighting to draw your attention to various people or objects
in the painting?
2. How does he use darkness to accentuate other aspects of the painting?
3. What is the overall impression you get about the tonal quality of the painting from
the colors and light and dark mixtures of the painting?
4. Does the light come from a source within or outside of the painting? How does this
affect your perception of the painting?
Hawthorne the Painter
After completing the study of Rembrandts paintings, read the passage below from The
Scarlet Letter and answer the questions that follow.
8

from Chapter 16

The road, after the two wayfarers had crossed from the peninsula to
the mainland, was no other than a footpath. It straggled onward into the
mystery of the primeval forest. This hemmed it in so narrowly, and
stood so black and dense on either side, and disclosed such imperfect
glimpses of the sky above, that, to Hesters mind, it imaged not amiss the
moral wilderness in which she had so long been wandering. The day was
chill and sombre. Overhead was a gray expanse of cloud, slightly stirred,
however, by a breeze; so that a gleam of flickering sunshine might now
and then be seen at its solitary play along the path. This flitting
cheerfulness was always at the further extremity of some long vista
through the forest. The sportive sunlightfeebly sportive, at best, in the
predominant pensiveness of the day and scenewithdrew itself as they
came nigh, and left the spots where it had danced the drearier, because
they had hoped to find them bright.

1. What words or phrases suggest the tonal qualities you found in the Rembrandt
paintings?
2. What words or phrases correspond with the art terms above?
3. How does Hawthorne paint this scene using words instead of paint?
4. How do the questions used for the Rembrandt paintings help you to visualize this
scene?
5. What feeling does Hawthorne evoke in you as you read this scene? How does he
accomplish this?
6. How does he use contrast of light and dark in this scene? How is this similar to
Rembrandts use of light and dark?
The Painting of a Soul
Read the following descriptions of Roger Chillingworth. As you read these passages
from chapter 10, think of the work you did with the Rembrandt painting and the scene
from the novel. Apply some of the same techniques in analyzing Chillingworths
character.
Passage 1
Sometimes, a light glimmered out of the physicians eyes, burning
blue and ominous, like the reflection of a furnace, or let us say, like one
of those gleams of ghastly fire that darted from Bunyans awful door-way
in the hill-side and quivered on the pilgrims face. The soil where this
dark miner was working had perchance shown indications that
encouraged him.
Passage 2
Then, after long search into the ministers dim interior, and turning
over many precious materials, in the shape of high aspirations for the
welfare of his race, warm love of souls, pure sentiments, natural piety,
strengthened thought and study, and illuminated by revelation,--all of
which invaluable gold was perhaps no better than rubbish to the
seeker,--he would turn back, discouraged, and begin his quest towards
another point. He groped along as stealthily, with as cautious a tread,
and as wary an outlook, as a thief entering a chamber where a man lies
only half-asleep,--or, it may be, broad awake,--with purpose to steal the

very treasure which this man guards as the apple of his eye. In spite of
his premeditated carefulness, the floor would now and then creak; his
garments would rustle; the shadow of his presence, in a forbidden
proximity, would be thrown across his victim.
Passage 3
But with what a wild look of wonder, joy, and horror! With what a
ghastly rapture, as it were, too mighty to be expressed only by the eye
and features, and therefore bursting forth through the whole ugliness of
his figure, and making itself even riotously manifest by the extravagant
gestures with which he threw up his arms towards the ceiling, and
stamped his foot upon the floor! Had a man seen old Roger
Chillingworth, at that moment of his ecstasy, he would have had no need
to ask how Satan comports himself, when a precious human soul is lost
to heaven, and won into his kingdom.

Obviously, the way a writer describes a person is different from the way he or she would
describe a scene. In both cases, the authors brush strokes of color are words. Answer
the following questions about the passages above.
1. How is Hawthornes description of Chillingworth similar to his description in the
scene from chapter 16 referenced above?
2. What contrasts, either direct or indirect, does Hawthorne use in his description of
Chillingworth in these passages?
3. What is the overall tone of these descriptions?
4. What insight into Chillingworths character do the contrasts and tone of the
descriptions provide?
Viewing the Painting
Viewing a painting is a visual experience. In a sense, reading literature is also a visual
experience since you must use your eyes. The significant difference between a painting
and a novel is that the painter uses paints to represent a scene and a novelist uses
words. The reader must supply the visual aspect of the novel by means of imagination.
Symbolism and characterization are brush strokes of a novelists palette. Consider
these points as you answer the following questions.
1. How has Hawthorne used words and symbols to create a picture?
2. What do the descriptions both of the scene from chapter 16 (see above) and of Roger
Chillingworth (see above) tell you about Hawthorne as a painter of verbal pictures?
3. How are Rembrandt and Hawthorne similar in their use of color, light and dark, and
contrast?
The Artists Point of View
Study a visual work of art carefully, and answer the following questions.
1. Where is the artist standing relative to the subject of the painting?
2. What does this position tell about what is important in the painting? What is
important to the artist?
3. What does the artist want you to think about the subject? How do you know?
4. What details does the artist seem to emphasize in this picture?
5. What insight do these details give you into the mind of the artist?
10

Point of ViewLiterature
Look carefully at the following chart3 to understand what each point of view means.
Outside Narrators
Privileged
Effaced
Identity in
Story
Voice

Access to
Characters
Consciousness

Presence

Reliability

Inside Narrators
Dramatized
Restricted

Not a character

Not a character

A character

Not a character

Third-person pronouns
(he, she, they, etc.)
occasionally use firstperson pronouns
Unlimited access to
consciousnesses of all
the characters

Third-person
pronouns

First-person
pronouns (I,
my, mine, etc.)

Third-person
pronouns

No access: does
not enter
consciousness
of characters;
reveals their
thoughts and
feelings
through
dialogue and
action
Conveys almost
no sense of his
presence, since
he generally
gives no long
description or
narrative
analysis and
does not adopt
different
perspectives

Access to
consciousness
of one
character-himself

Access to
consciousness of
one character or
to consciousness
of a community
of characters
through whose
perceptions he
conveys in the
story
Speaks in his own
voice but
submerges his
vision into the
character(s)
whose
perspective(s)
serves as
narrative focus

Reliable in that
he is neutral

Frequently
unreliable
because his selfknowledge and
knowledge of
others is

Calls attention to
himself as narrator
through:
1. descriptions
conveyed in his own
voice and reflecting his
position outside the
events of the story;
2. narrative analysis of
interpretation of
character, incident, and
setting;
3. adoption of
perspectives different
from his own when he
reveals the thoughts of
certain characters at
close range
Generally reliable
because he frequently
stands close to the
implied author

11

Dominates
story; relates his
own experience
or, as witness,
someone elses

Ranges from
reliable to
unreliable
depending on the
character(s)
whose

imperfect

consciousness(es)
he reveals and on
the presence or
absence of clues
affirming or
negating implicit
attitudes and
values

Read the following excerpt and answer the questions that follow. Refer to the chart
above as you read.
The Function of Point of View
The fiction writers chief structural resource is point of viewat its
most fundamental level, the physical vantage point occupied by the
narrator in a story or novel and the device by which the writer
establishes the authority for his fiction. For the writer, point of
view is the basic means of ordering and unifying his material. Once
he has decided upon the position and, further, upon the disposition
of his narrator (choices that are often partly unconscious), all other
ingredients of the work must relate to his decision. For the reader,
point of view, by affecting the shape of the story, determines how the
story material reaches him and how he perceives the fictional events.
The narrator of a story stands in one of two basic relationships to
the events of the story: outside or inside the action. The task of the
critical reader is to ascertain the effects of each narrative perspective
and disposition. In addition, he must concern himself with the
matter of open and closed consciousnesses and their relation to
point of view. An open consciousness is a character whose inner
thoughts are revealed to the reader. Frequently, the author depicts
setting or action through the perceptions of such a character. A
closed consciousness is a character whose inner thoughts are hidden
making the reader view him through such externals as physical
action, dialogue, the reaction of others, and personal appearance.
Ultimately, the reader must see how point of view . . . serves as a
mode of thematic definition (as a way of conveying meaning) as well
as a mode of dramatic definition (as a determiner of structure).4

1. How important is point of view to your understanding of any story? Explain.


2. What is the difference between an artists use of point of view and a writers use of
point of view?
3. What is meant by thematic definition? How do you think point of view helps to
discover a theme or themes of a story?
4. What is meant by dramatic definition? How might point of view help you discover
the structure of a story?
Examining Point of View
From the chosen point of view, we learn what the author is thinking about a character, a
scene, or an action in the story. Reread chapter 13 of The Scarlet Letter carefully and
answer the following questions.
12

1. What is the point of view of this novel thus far? (Choose the appropriate one from
the point of view chart above.)
2. How do you know this? Support your answer with direct proof from the novel.
3. In real life, we often interpret actions, events, and people based on our own point of
view. We make judgments and decisions based on our experience as individuals.
Recount here one important event from your own life.
4. Reread your accounting. How did you present it? How would your best friend
recount that event? What is the difference?
5. Write a description of a water fountain.
6. Now, write a description of a water fountain from the point of view of a four-year-old
child.
7. What choices did you have to make in describing the water fountain as a four-yearold child would view it?
Hawthorne and Hester
Readers of fiction are always looking through someone elses eyes. We call this person
the narrator. The narrator makes judgments about the characters and actions. The
story is filtered through the narrators eyes, and readers make judgments about
characters based on what the narrator tells them.
1.
2.
3.
4.

Where do you see the narrator standing in relationship to Hester in chapter 13?
How does the narrator feel about Hester?
What specific words or phrases indicate this?
Look carefully at the following passages from chapter 13. Explain how they help to
substantiate the narrators attitudes and judgments about Hester.
a. The links that united her to the rest of human kindlinks of flowers, or silk,
or gold, or whatever the materialhad all been broken.
b. It was perceived, too, that while Hester never put forward even the humblest
title to share in the worlds privileges,--farther than to breathe the common air,
and earn daily bread for little Pearl and herself by the faithful labor of her
hands,--she was quick to acknowledge her sisterhood with the race of man,
whenever benefits were to be conferred.
c. She was self-ordained a Sister of Mercy; or, we may rather say, the worlds
heavy hand had so ordained her, when neither the world nor she looked forward
to this result. The letter was the symbol of her calling. Such helpfulness was
found in her,--so much power to do, and power to sympathize,--that many
people refused to interpret the scarlet A by its original signification. They said
that it meant Able; so strong was Hester Prynne, with a womans strength.
d. She who has once been woman, and ceased to be so, might at any moment
become a woman again, if there were only the magic touch to effect the
transfiguration.
e. Much of the marble coldness of Hesters impression was to be attributed to
the circumstance that her life had turned, in a great measure, from passion and
feeling, to thought.

13

f. Thus, Hester Prynne . . . wandered without a clew in the dark labyrinth of the
mind; now turned aside by an insurmountable precipice; now . . . ghastly scenery
all around her, and a home and comfort nowhere.

5. In what ways is the presentation of Hester in chapters 13-15 different from that of
previous chapters?

SettingReflection of the Soul


Read the following commentary about setting, and answer the questions that follow.
The Importance of Setting
Setting is the representation in fiction of the place and time that constitute
the environment of the action. Incorporating the tangible and spiritual aspects
of physical locations and historical eras, setting includes the depiction of objects
and institutions peculiar to certain places and periods. . . .
Closely related to characterization, setting enhances the credibility of the
characters by providing a visible context for them. It can also influence,
sometimes even control, their lives.
As with character and plot, the
establishment of setting calls for selectivity by the writer. Often, what he
chooses not to describe is particularly significant, and frequently what is
included alerts us to what is missing. . . .
As the writer may depict a rich variety of characters, so he may set his story in
any time or any placeactual or imaginary. He may invent a place and time,
creating fanciful landscapes sustained only by his imagination and putting the
action backward into a remote era or forward into a visionary future. . . .
By setting his story in a real location or in one resembling an actual place,
the writer releases a host of associations in the reader. . . .
By establishing a real setting, the writer can manipulate the readers
knowledge in still another way: he can choose to confirm preconceptions about
a particular place or to reverse those expectations. . . .
Like every other aspect of fiction, setting is affected by point of view. In
stories told by an effaced narrator, description of setting is customarily objective
and brief, with the narrator providing only those details necessary to convey a
minimal sense of place. In contrast, there is often copious description in stories
related by a privileged narrator, who is at liberty to depict setting either through
his own perceptions or through those of his characters. . . .
Setting is related to mood as well as to point of view. Mood refers to the
atmosphere that surrounds and helps to define the world in which the characters
move. Thus mood involves the feeling that emanates from certain locales or
accrues from particular actions. Although intangible, mood can be an
unshakeable quality that affects our responses to a story, as in real life we are
affected by the atmosphere of certain places.5

14

1.
2.
3.
4.

Using your own words, describe the importance of setting.


How are character and setting related? Why is this important?
How are point of view and setting related? Why is this important?
Describe a real life place from your experience. Convey the mood of the place
through your descriptions.

The Hawthorne Trees


Reread chapters 16-19 carefully. Pay particular attention to the descriptions of the
forest in each chapter. Describe the mood that each chapter presents through its
description of the forest.
Chapter

Overall Description
of Forest

Particular
Description of Some
Part of the Forest

Overall Mood
Evoked in the
Chapter

16
17
18
19

Answer the following questions.


1. What overall impression do you get about the forest based on your charting?
2. What differences do you see in the descriptions through the different chapters?
3. What impressions about nature does Hawthorne present with his descriptions of the
forest in these chapters?
Among the Trees
Note the characters actions and feelings when they are in the forest.
Chapter

Overall Description
of the Forest

Particular Action of
a Character in
Forest

16
17
15

Feeling of Character
in Forest

18
19

Answer the following questions.


1. What did you notice about the characters actions and feelings while in the forest?
2. What changes take place in the characters feelings? in personality?
3. How are these changes related to or reflected in the description of the forest?
4. What does Hawthorne wish you to know about the character by his presentation in
the forest scenes? How do you know this?
5. How has Hawthorne linked the forest scenes with his characters?
6. How has Hawthorne manipulated your reactions to his characters by placing them in
the forest?
7. What are some associations you have with the forest?
8. Of what might Hawthornes forest by symbolic?
9. In one sentence, describe a possible theme of the novel that was generated from your
study of the forest.
Un-Mazing Grace
Reread chapter 20 carefully in order to complete the following chart. Find specific
words or phrases that fit the categories listed.
Category
Natural
Setting

Peace

Terror/Dismay

Other
Setting
Details
Sense
Imagery
Feelings
Social
Setting
Answer the following questions.
1. What are the strongest image words used to create a sense of peace?
2. What are the strongest image words used to create a sense of dismay or terror?
3. What conclusions can you draw from these contrasting images?
4. What insight into Arthur Dimmesdale do you have at this point?
5. In what ways do the contrasting images seem to indicate that Dimmesdale has had a
great burden lifted from his soul?
16

Setting the Stage


Reread chapters 21 and 22 carefully. Imagine that these chapters are two scenes from a
movie. Try to visualize what is going on and what the settings and characters look like.
Find words or phrases in these chapters to use in completing the chart.
Character

Physical
Description

Clothing
Description

Sense
Imagery

Feelings

Hester
Pearl
Dimmesdale
Chillingworth
Other
Characters
Answer the following questions.
1. Based on the physical descriptions of the characters, what does Hawthorne want you
to think about them?
2. Which characters are sympathetically presented? Which are not? Why is this so?
3. How do the clothing descriptions add to an understanding of the characters and their
roles?
4. How does the sense imagery set a tone?
5. What role do the feelings of the characters play in setting a tone?
6. In the opening chapters of the novel, there was a gathering of people, as there is in
these two chapters. What is different about the two gatherings?
7. What is different about the characters now as compared with the opening chapters?
8. What has caused this difference?
9. For what do you think Hawthorne is setting the stage? How do you know?
The Forest and the Marketplace
Reread the first three chapters and chapters 21 and 22. You will notice that the
marketplace is the central setting in these chapters. However, the forest also plays an
important role in chapters 21 and 22, so the two settings are merged. Complete the
following chart, and answer the questions.
17

Topic

The Marketplace Chapters


1-3

The Marketplace Chapters


21-22

People Present in
Marketplace
Reasons for Being
There
Attitudes of Those
Present
Major Sense
Imagery Used in
Description of
Market
1. What major differences do you see in the two descriptions of the marketplace?
2. Why have these changes taken place?
3. How are the townspeople different?
4. While the forest is not physically present in the second presentation of the
marketplace, it is spiritually present. The four major charactersHester, Pearl,
Dimmesdale, and Chillingworthhave all been in the forest at one time or another
for various reasons. How has this changed them?
a. Hester
b. Pearl
c. Dimmesdale
d. Chillingworth
5. What other character present in the marketplace is associated with the forest? Why
is the character in the marketplace?
6. What is the spiritual power of the forest?
7. How has the forest affected the second presentation of the marketplace in chapters 21
and 22 and thus affected all those present?
Climb Every Scaffold
Read the following commentary carefully, and answer the questions that follow.
The Scarlet Letter
[The novel] is built around the scaffold. At the beginning, in the
middle, and at the end of the story the scaffold is the dominating point.
Just as it literally rises above the market-place, so does it structurally rise
out of the novels plan and attribute pattern to it. In chapter 2, after the
very short first chapter, Hester is taken up on the scaffold. In chapter 12,
the middle chapter (when we omit the concluding chapter), Dimmesdale
mounts the scaffold. In chapter 23, the last (omitting the conclusion),
Dimmesdale takes Hester and Pearl up there with him. These three
incidents are, in every sense, the high points of the novel. The middle
chapter, number 12, tends to divide the story into two parts (or three
parts, counting this middle chapter). This division is logical when we
realize that up to chapter 12, neither the reader nor Chillingworth is
certain that Dimmesdale is the father of little Pearl; after chapter 12,
there can be no doubt.6

1. Based on the commentary, what is the importance of the scaffold in the


novel?
2. Is the writers contention that the scaffold divides the novel into two or
18

three parts a valid one? Why or why not?


3. How is the scaffold described in the following chapters?
a. Chapters 1-3
b. Chapter 12
c. Chapter 23
4. What are the differences in these descriptions?
5. What is the symbolic use of the scaffold?

In Full View
Answer the following questions about chapter 23.
1. How does Hester respond to Dimmesdales asking her and Pearl to come
up onto the scaffold with him?
2. Why do you think she feels this way?
3. The following characters, rather than uniting, become more isolated.
Explain their isolation.
a. Hester
b. Pearl
c. Dimmesdale
d. Chillingworth
4. What specific evidence in the novel reveals their isolation?
a. Hester
b. Pearl
c. Dimmesdale
d. Chillingworth
5. Show how this sense of isolation is a possible theme for the novel.
Conclusion
Reread chapter 24 carefully before answering the following questions.
1. Some critics say that chapter 23 is the actual end of the novel. If this is so,
why do you think Hawthorne wrote chapter 24?
2. How are the following characters described in chapter 24?
a. Hester
b. Pearl
c. Dimmesdale
d. Chillingworth
3. How are these descriptions consistent with what has happened to the
characters?
4. If you were writing this novel, how would you end it? Why?
The SymbolA Means of Understanding
Refer to your work on What Does a Symbol Mean and Symbols Chart
in order to develop an accurate and concrete summary of your findings.
Assigned Symbol_________________________________________
1. What stands out in your mind about the symbol as you follow it
19

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

throughout the novel? What is the significance of the symbol in relation to


the novel?
How does the symbol weave itself into the texture of the novel?
How does the symbol help you to understand the story?
Is the symbol in any way connected with any of the characters in the
novel? What is the connection? How does this connection help you to
understand the character?
What other conclusions and observations can you make about the symbol?
What information and understanding of the novel can you share with the
class based on your work with the symbol?
What is the best method for presenting this information? Why is this the
best way?

Character Analysis
In your Character Study chart, you followed assigned characters
throughout your reading. Review the charts you have kept, and then answer
the following questions.
Character Studied________________________________________
1. What are some of the characters significant actions as we follow him or
her throughout the novel?
2. What insight do these actions provide into the personality of the
character?
3. What are some of the most significant statements made by the character?
4. How do these statements provide insight into the character?
5. How does the character interact with other characters?
6. In the final analysis, how do you feel about the character and the
characters role in the story?
7. What information do you need to present to your classmates so that they
will understand what you have learned about this character?
8. What is the best way for you to present this information? Why?
ThemeA Thread That Binds
A theme of any story is a thread that runs throughout the story. In the case of
a novel there may be several themes. Listed below are some of the themes
that are commonly discussed in relation to The Scarlet Letter. Based on the
knowledge you have acquired, work with the theme assigned to your group.
Possible Themes
a. The effects of guilt
b. The effects of sin
c. Isolation and alienation from self and society
d. Intolerance and nonforgiveness
e. Obsession for revenge
f. Suffering, punishment, and redemption
Assigned Theme_________________________________________
1. How is this theme demonstrated by the actions of the characters? What
character best demonstrates this theme? Why?
2. How do the symbols used in the novel serve to underscore the theme?
What symbol best demonstrates this theme? Why?
20

3. What aspect of setting best demonstrates the theme? How? Why?


4. How does the point of view allow you to see this as a theme for the novel?
5. How does the structure of the novel, as presented in Climb Every
Scaffold, help you to understand this theme?

21

Source: The Center for Learning Curriculum Unit and Secondary Solutions Standards-Based Literature Guide
Roland Bartel, Metaphors and Symbols: Forays into Language (Urbana, Ill.: National Council of Teachers of English,
1983), 62.
3
Source: The Process of Fiction: Contemporary Stories and Criticism, 2nd ed., ed. Barbara McKenzie (Orlando: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1974), 10-11.
4
Barbara McKenzie, ed., The Process of Fiction, 2nd ed. (Orlando: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974), 8-9.
5
Barbara McKenzie, ed., The Process of Fiction: Contemporary Stories and Criticism, 2nd ed. (Orlando: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, 1974), 32-36.
6
Leland Schubert, Hawthorne, the Artist: Fine-Art Devices in Fiction (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
1944), 138.
2

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