[align=center]المحاضرة الأولى[/align][/color]
[align=center]Nathaniel Hawthorne[/align][/color]
1- The Scarlet Letter which had appeared in 1850 consolidated Hawthorne's literary reputation.
2- Hawthorne was born in 1408, in Salem, Massachusetts into a family that descended from influential 17th century.
3- He attended college from 1821 to 1825.
4- After his graduation and returning to his hometown, he pursued his literary career. He wrote short stories and sketches.
5- His first published collection Twice Told Tales brought his name before the public.
6- He was appointed in 1846 as a surveyor of customs, an appointment made famous in 1850 by "The Custom House", the autobiographical preface to The Scarlet Letter.
7- He wrote two novels, The House of The Seven Gables and The Blithedale Romance.
8- In his stories, Hawthorne, deals with New England's colonial past. He then turns away from his theme to return to Puritan history in his masterpiece The Scarlet Letter. However, Puritan history is incidental in Hawthorne's moral and psychological.
9- The philosophic attitude implicit in his writing in general pessimistic and growing out of the puritan background.
[align=center]The Scarlet Letter[/align][/color]
This somber romance of conscience and the tragic consequences of concealed guilt is set in Puritan Boston during the mid of the 17th century.
An introductory essay describes the author's experience as an official of the Salem custom-house and his supposed discovery of 'a scarlet cloth letter' and documents relating the story of Hester.
An English scholar sends his young wife, Hester, to establish their home in Boston. When he arrives two years later, he finds Hester on a scaffold with her illegitimate child in her arms. She refuses to name her lover and is sentenced to wear a scarlet 'A', signifying adulteress as a token of her sin. The husband conceals his identity, and he assumes the name Roger Chillingworth, and in a guise of a doctor seeks to discover her lover.
Hester, a woman of strong independent nature, becomes sympathetic with the unfortunates, and her works of mercy gradually win the respect of her neighbors. Chillingworth, meanwhile, discovers that Arthur Dimmesdale, the young minister, is the father of Hester's beautiful child, Pearl. Dimmesdale has struggled for years with his burden of hidden guilt; pride prevents him from confessing publicly. Although he does secret penance, he continued to be torture by his conscience. Chillingworth's life is ruined by his preoccupation with his cruel search, and he becomes a morally degraded person.
Hester wishes her lover to flee with her to Europe, but he refuses the plan as a temptation from the devil and makes a public confession on the scaffold. He dies there in Hester's arms, a man broken by his concealed guilt, but Hester lives on victorious over her sin because she openly confesses her own sin to devote herself to ensuring a happy life in Europe for Pearl and helping others in misfortunes.