"The path strangled onward into the
mystery of the primeval forest"(179).
This sentence displays just one of the multiple personalities that the
forest symbolizes in The Scarlet Letter written by Nathaniel Hawthorn. As seen in the epic story Wizard of OZ, the
forest represents a place of evil and delight, but in the Scarlet Letter the
forest symbolizes much more then that.
Each character brings out a different side of the forest, however the
forest also brings out a different side in each character. For some the forest may be a place of
sinister thoughts and wrong doing, but for others it is a place of happiness
and freedom.
The first encounter with the forest we
have symbolizes just some of the evil that lingers within the darkness of the
forest. As Hester and Pearl are leaving
governor Bellinghams estate they are confronted by mistress Hibbins who
explains that the witches are meeting in the forest, and she then invites
Hester to become more deeply involved with her evil ways. "Wilt thou go with us tonight"(113)
asked mistress Hibbins, yet Hester refused to sign her name in the black mans
book on that night. She explains that
the only reason she does not sign is because Pearl is still in her life. At this time the forest itself is a open door
to another world, a wicked world that would take her away from her present
situation, but that is not the only door that the forest holds.
The forest is an open door to love and
freedom for both Hester and Dimmesdale.
It is a place where the letter on their bodies can no longer have an
effect on them if they
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choose. A world ruled by nature and governed by
natural law as opposed to the artificial strict community with its man made puritan
laws. Its as if the forest represents a
key to the shackles the Hester and Dimmesdale have been forced to wear, all
that they have to do is unlock it.
Although if they choose not to unlock them, they begin to dwell on the
things that they have done to deserve the shackles. In this the forest represents a thing of
truth, weather it be good or bad.
In pearls eyes the forest has a totally
different concept. To Pearl the forest
is like a best friend. It treats her as
if she were one of its own. The animals
do not runaway at her ever move, instead they come to her with open arms. The light is chasing her no matter where she
goes. She is able to run and play freely
to her innocent hearts content. She can
do that because her heart is innocent and the forest recognizes that.
When reading this book you can look deeper
into the forest and find more powerful symbols inside. The sunlight is one of the most obvious of
them all. While Pearl plays in the forest
the sunlight seems to find her no matter where she is standing. At the same time it will not cast a single
glimmer of light onto Hester, until she removes her scarlet letter. Then at that point the sun breaks through the
dense trees and gazes upon her. The
light is a symbol of purity and truth.
It does not shine on Hester when she has the letter because the letter
itself is not pure, even though everything underneath the letter has become
pure through the years.
The Brooke that runs through the forest is
also full of symbolism. At one point of
the story the Brooke represents a wall.
"Then strange child, why does thou not come to me?"(205) asks
Hester. She explains that she will not
cross the Brooke because she Hester is not wearing her letter. To Dimmesdale the Brooke then becomes a
boundary between two worlds, a world of peace and freedom and a world of lies
and guilt. The
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Brooke is also
known to symbolize one more thing throughout the entire story. It is often suggestive that the Brooke often
represents pearl. One reason is because
the Brooke has an unknown source, Pearl also has an unknown source, meaning
that most people don't know where the Brooke or Pearl came from. One more similarity between the two is that
the Brooke is woven trough a dark and often evil forest, yet the water does not
stop traveling. Pearl is in the exact
same situation. Throughout her hole life
she has been unwillingly woven into the evil and sorrow the her mother deals
with. So just as the Brooke she keeps on
going.
As you have seen there is a fountain of
symbolism in the Scarlet Letter. The
forest is one of the most symbolized objects in the entire story. It is one thing that can bring joy, sorrow,
freedom, and evil to your life, but most of all the forest brings you truth. Once you walk into the forest lies no longer
exist. This is show in every example
given, that the truth comes out in the forest no matter what. Maybe that is why these characters go there,
because it is the only place truth exists.
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