Baym Pearl TSL
Baym Pearl TSL
Baym Pearl TSL
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Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.
2
Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.
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Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.
explanation that the child is jealous. Her reflecting of Hesters moods may have
nothing mysterious about it: Spending so much time with her mother, being
completely dependent on her, and possessing an imaginative nature, Pearl would
naturally be keenly attuned to Hester, even more than the preoccupied mother
might be herself. Pearls extreme restlessness during the last scene in the
marketplace, the narrator says, was played upon and vibrated with her mothers
disquietude (244).
However realistic she may be, there is no mistaking that at the end of the
book (when she kisses her father)8 Pearl becomes fully human for the first time.
A spell was broken. The great scene of grief, in which the wild infant bore
a part, had developed all her sympathies; and as her tears fell upon her
fathers cheek, they were the pledge that she would grow up amid human
joy and sorrow, not for ever do battle with the world, but be a woman in it.
Towards her mother, too, Pearls errand as a messenger of anguish was all
fulfilled. (256)
So Pearl has been the letters messenger (its angel, in the words original sense)
and the letters incarnation;9 and she has also been its victim. Her victimization
has consisted in being denied a reality of her own. At the very moment when she
becomes real, neverthelesswhen her errand toward Hester is fulfilledshe
ceases to be a character in the story.10 Thus, the human character Pearl is not
really part of The Scarlet Letter, and the character in
7. How does the writer
the book is best thought of as a symbol and a function
explain the long quote
who is naturalized by being given a smattering of
above?
realistic traits.
8. her father: Dimmesdale, the preacher, who has never before publicly acknowledged he is Pearl's
father and who has privately suffered great shame for allowing Hester to bear all the punishment.
As Dimmesdale is dying, he calls out to Pearl for a sign of her affection (and forgiveness), and
she kisses him.
9.incarnation (inkrnshn): given a human body as a living example of something.
10.she ceases . . . in the story: From this moment on Pearl does not appear in the novel as a
character. Her importance does not dim, but she is just not shown again.
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Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.