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The Scarlet Letter: Chapters 3 & 4 The Scarlet Letter: Chapters 3 & 4

The Scarlet Letter: Chapters 3 & 4 - PowerPoint Presentation

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The Scarlet Letter: Chapters 3 & 4 - PPT Presentation

Strenuously forged by the hands of Bailey Estes and Forrest Ream Activity Pick a crime any crime anything you could get in trouble for Think of a way to punish someone for doing said crime The punishment cannot physically harm anyone ID: 676639

chillingworth hester man crowd hester chillingworth crowd man hester

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Slide1

The Scarlet Letter:Chapters 3 & 4

Strenuously forged by the hands of Bailey Estes and Forrest ReamSlide2

Activity

Pick a crime, any crime, anything you could get in trouble for

Think of a way to punish someone for doing said crime

The punishment cannot physically harm anyone

The punishment should be designed to publically embarrass the criminal

The punishment should be somehow related to the crime itself

Whoever

comes up with the cleverest idea winsSlide3

Chapter 3 Summary

Hester Prynne and her child have been put forth on display on a platform in the marketplace as part of her punishment. On the edge of the crowd Hester spots an Indian man accompanying a hunched, white man who asks members of the crowd about Hester’s situation, including her name and why she is on display. According to the townsperson, Hester has so far refused to reveal the name of her fellow adulterer. Hester seems to recognize the man, but is pulled out of her reverie to be questioned by Governor Bellingham, the clergyman John Wilson, and Hester’s priest Reverend Dimmesdale about the identity of her lover. She again refuses to divulge the information, then is sent back into the prison for the remainder of her sentence.Slide4

Chapter 4 Summary

After returning to her cell, Hester is in

a ”state

of nervous excitement.” in order to keep her from harming herself or her child, a doctor is brought to her cell. The doctor is revealed to be Roger Chillingworth, the hunched man from the crowd. He gives the baby a sleeping draught, then sits and talks to Mrs. Prynne. Through their conversation, Chillingworth reveals himself to be Hester’s estranged husband. He also vows to find the child’s father, but not to reveal himself or take revenge on the man.Slide5

ThemesAcceptance: While Hester and Chillingworth can accept her actions, the rest of the town has vilified them, making her the talk of the town.

Justice: Everyone is this book is seeking justice for something. The townspeople are seeking justice for a perceived wrong (Hester committing adultery), which comes in the form of the

scarlet letter.

Chillingworth seeks justice for Hester's wrong against him, her husband, by searching for the identity of her lover (although he also wronged her by leaving for several years).

Guilt: Both Hester and Chillingworth feel a certain amount of guilt for their actions, Hester for her adultery and Roger for leaving her on her own for yearsSlide6

Romanticismvs. Puritanism

In these chapters, the Romantic and Puritan ideas are often at odds, because Romantic ideas were exactly what the Puritans were trying to avoid.

Hester seeks the Romantic ideas of individuality and self-realization by becoming her own person, not simply her husband’s wife. The Puritan views of a subservient wife, however, forced her to wear the

scarlet letter

because of her actions.Slide7

Character Analysis: Hester Prynne

In these chapters we see Hester’s fear, as well as her perseverence and bravery. When Hester first sees her husband she is terrified of what he will do to her. As she talks to him, however, she becomes very strong, defending her actions. This same strength we see earlier when Hester is questioned by the elites of the town; she defends the name of her accomplice with complete conviction. These chapters show that she understands her actions, and that her single regret is that her child be raised under the stigma of the

scarlet letter

.Slide8

Character Analysis:Roger Chillingworth

The character of Roger Chillingworth is introduced in chapter three as a man at the edge of the crowd that simply knows Hester, and is recognized by her. In the next chapter, however, when he goes to speak to her, he is revealed to be a physician of some talent, as well as Mrs. Prynne’s estranged husband. He is shown to have compassion for Hester, despite what she did, and wants to find her lover for some unknown purpose; he does not wish to cause bodily harm or announce the man to the world, only to know who he is.Slide9

Literary Devices

Irony: During Hester’s punishment on the scaffolding, she reacts to the sight of Roger Chillingworth on the edge of the crowd. The reader is informed, through the way the two characters react to each other, that they somehow know each other. The reader can see this clearly, though everyone in the crowd or on the balcony is in the dark.

Narrative Voice: The narrator’s voice comes from a subjective, third-person point-of-view. The narrator describes the events from the viewpoint of a few characters, not just one. He describes their thoughts and emotions, though not those of everyone.Slide10

Literary Devices cont.Figurative Language:

“There was a remarkable intelligence in his features, as of a person who had so cultivated his mental part that it could not fail to mould the physical to itself, and become manifest by unmistakable tokens.”

“A writhing horror twisted itself across his features, like a snake gliding swiftly over them, and making one little pause, with all its wreathed intervolutions in open sight.”

“But[the medicine] will calm the swell and heaving of thy passion, like oil thrown on the waves of a tempestuous sea.”Slide11

Literary Devices cont.Symbolism and Color: The

scarlet

of the A symbolizes the sexual nature of the sin it punishes. It also symbolizes the flames of Hell, as it is often described as glowing or burning. Chillingworth’s hunched disfigurement symbolizes his altered thought processes; he is often shown thinking or acting very differently from those around him.Slide12

Quiz

Other than the

scarlet letter

, how is Hester punished?

How does Hester react to the stranger she sees in the crowd?

What is the stranger’s name?

How is he connected to Hester?

What does he vow to do to Hester’s lover?