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A P R I L 1 8 8 6
The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
A review by Julian Hawthorne
Between Hawthorne's earlier and his later productions there is no solution of
literary continuity, but only increased growth and grasp. Rappaccini's
Daughter, Young Goodman Brown, Peter Goldthwaite's Treasure, and The Artist of
the Beautiful, on the one side, are the promise which is fulfilled in The
Scarlet Letter and the House of The Seven Gables, on the other; though we
should hardly have understood the promise had not the fulfillment explained it.
The shorter pieces have a lyrical quality, but the longer romances express more
than a mere combination of lyrics; they have a rich, multifarious life of their
own. The material is so wrought as to become incidental to something loftier
and greater, for which our previous analysis of the contents of the egg had not
prepared us.
The Scarlet Letter was the first, and the tendency of criticism is to pronounce
it the most impressive, also, of these ampler productions. It has the charm of
unconsciousness; the author did not realize while he worked, that this "most
prolix among tales" was alive with the miraculous vitality of genius. It
combines the strength and substance of an oak with the subtle organization of a
rose, and is great, not of malice aforethought, but inevitably. It goes to the
root of the matter, and reaches some unconventional conclusions, which,
however, would scarce be apprehended by one reader in twenty. For the external
or literal significance of the story, though in strict correspondence with the
spirit, conceals that spirit from the literal eye. The reader may choose his
depth according to his inches but only a tall man will touch the bottom.
The punishment of the scarlet letter is a historical fact; and, apart from the
symbol thus ready provided to the author's hand, such a book as The Scarlet
Letter would doubtless never have existed. But the symbol gave the touch
whereby Hawthorne's disconnected thoughts on the subject were united and
crystallized in organic form. Evidently, likewise, it was a source of
inspiration, suggesting new aspects and features of the truth, -- a sort of
witch-hazel to detect spiritual gold. Some such figurative emblem, introduced
in a matter-of-fact way, but gradually invested with supernatural attributes,
was one of Hawthorne's favorite devices in his stories. We may realize its
value, in the present case, by imagining the book with the scarlet letter
omitted. It is not practically essential to the plot. But the scarlet letter
uplifts the theme from the material to the spiritual level. It is the
concentration and type of the whole argument. It transmutes the prose into
poetry. It serves as a formula for the conveyance of ideas otherwise too subtle
for words, as well as to enhance the gloomy picturesqueness of the moral
scenery. It burns upon its wearer's breast, it casts a lurid glow along her
pathway, it isolates her among mankind, and is at the same time the mystic
talisman to reveal to her the guilt hidden in other hearts. It is the Black
Man's mark, and the first plaything of the infant Pearl. As the story develops,
the scarlet letter becomes the dominant figure, -- everything is tinged with
its sinister glare. By a ghastly miracle its semblance is reproduced upon the
breast of the minister, where "God's eye beheld it! the angels were forever
pointing at it! the devil knew it well, and fretted it continually with the
touch of his burning finger!" -- and at last, to Dimmesdale's crazed
imagination, its spectre appears even in the midnight sky as if heaven itself
had caught the contagion of his so zealously hidden sin. So strongly is the
scarlet letter rooted in every chapter and almost every sentence of the book
that bears its name. And yet it would probably have incommoded the average
novelist. The wand of Prospero, so far from aiding the uninititated, trips him
up, and scorches his fingers. Between genius and every other attribute of the
mind is a difference not of degree, but of kind.
Every story may be viewed under two aspects: as the logical evolution of a
conclusion from a premise, and as something colored and modified by the
personal qualities of the author. If the latter have genius, his share in the
product is comparable to nature's in a work of human art, -- giving it
everything except abstract form. But the majority of fiction-mongers are apt to
impair rather than enhance the beauty of the abstract form of their conception,
-- if, indeed, it possess any to begin with. At all events, there is no better
method of determining the value of a writer's part in a given work than to
consider the work in what may be termed its prenatal state. How much, for
example, of The Scarlet Letter was ready made before Hawthorne touched it? The
date is historically fixed at about the middle of the seventeenth century. The
stage properties, so to speak, are well adapted to become the furniture and
background of a romantic narrative. A gloomy and energetic religious sect,
pioneers in a virgin land, with the wolf and the Indian at their doors, but
with memories of England in their hearts and English traditions and prejudices
in their minds; weak in numbers, but strong in spirit; with no cultivation save
that of the Bible and the sword; victims, moreover of a dark and bloody
superstition, -- such a people and scene give admirable relief and color to a
tale of human frailty and sorrow. Amidst such surroundings, then, the figure of
a woman stands, with the scarlet letter on her bosom. But here we come to a
pause, and must look to the author for the next step.
For where shall the story begin? A "twenty-number" novel, of the Dickens or
Thackeray type, would start with Hester's girlhood, and the bulk of the
narrative would treat of the genesis and accomplishment of the crime. Nor are
hints wanting that this phase of the theme had been canvassed in Hawthorne's
mind. We have glimpses of the heroine in the antique gentility of her English
home; we see the bald brow and reverend beard of her father, and her mother's
expression of heedful and anxious love; we behold the girl's own face, glowing
with youthful beauty. She meets the pale, elderly scholar, with his dim yet
penetrating eyes, and the marriage, loveless on her part and folly on his,
takes place; but they saw not the bale-fire of the scarlet letter blazing at
the end of their path. The ill-assorted pair make their first home in
Amsterdam; but at length, tidings of the Puritan colony in Massachusetts
reaching them, they prepare to emigrate thither. But Prynne, himself delaying
to adjust certain affairs, sends his young, beautiful, wealthy wife in advance
to assume her station in the pioneer settlement. In the wild, free air of that
new world her spirits kindled, and many unsuspected tendencies of her impulsive
and passionate nature were revealed to her. The "rich, voluptuous, Oriental
characteristics" of her temperament, her ardent love of beauty, her strong
intellectual fibre, and her native energy and capacity, -- such elements needed
a strong and wise hand to curb and guide them, scarcely disguised as they were
by the light and graceful foliage of her innocent, womanly charm. Being left,
however, for two years "to her own misguidance," her husband had little cause
to wonder, when, on emerging from the forest, the first object to meet his eyes
was Hester Prynne, "standing up, a statue of ignominy, before the people." She
"doubtless was strongly tempted to her fall;" and though the author leaves the
matter there, so far as any explicit statement is concerned, it is manifest
that, had he written out what was already pictured before his imagination, the
few pregnant hints scattered through the volume would have been developed into
as circumstantial and laborious a narrative as any the most deliberate English
or French novelist could desire.
For his forbearance he has received much praise from well-meaning critics, who
seem to think that he was restrained by considerations of morality or
propriety. This appears a little strained. As an artist and as a man of a
certain temperament, Hawthorne treated that side of the subject which seemed to
him the more powerful and interesting. But a writer who works with deep insight
and truthful purpose can never be guilty of a lack of decency. Indecency is a
creation, not of God or of nature, but of the indecent. And whoever takes it
for granted that indecency is necessarily involved in telling the story of an
illicit passion has studied human nature and good literature to poor purpose.
The truth is that the situation selected by Hawthorne has more scope and depth
than the one which he passed over. It is with the subjective consequences of a
sinner's act that our understanding of him begins. The murderer's blow tells us
nothing of his character; but in his remorse or exultation over his deed his
secret is revealed to us. So Hawthorne fixes the starting-point of his romance
at Hester's prison-door, rather than at any earlier epoch of her career,
because the narrative can thence, as it were, move both ways at once; all
essentials of the past can be gathered up as wanted, and the reminiscences and
self-knowledge of the characters can supplement the author's analysis. The
story rounds itself out at once, catching light and casting shadow; and
Hester's previous life seems familiar to us the moment she takes her stand upon
the scaffold, -- for, in the case of an experience such as hers, a bare hint
tells the whole sad story. So long as women are frail and men selfish, the
prologue of The Scarlet Letter will not need to be written; it is known a
thousand times already. But what is to follow is not known; no newspapers
publish it, no whisper of it passes from mouth to mouth, nor is it cried on the
housetops. Yet is there great need that it should be taught, for such teaching
serves a practical moral use. All have felt the allurement of temptation, but
few realize the sequel of yielding to it. This sequel is exhaustively analyzed
in the romance, and hence the profound and permanent interest of the story. No
sinner so eccentric but may find here the statement of his personal problem.
Such an achievement avouches a lofty reach of art. The form has not the
carpenter's symmetry of a French drama, but the spontaneous, living symmetry of
a tree or flower, unfolding from the force within. We are drawn to regard, not
the outline, but the substance, which claims affinity with the inmost recesses
of our own nature; so that The Scarlet Letter is a self-revelation to
whomsoever takes it up.
In a story of this calibre a complex of incidents would be superfluous. The use
of incidents in fiction is twofold, -- to develop the characters and to keep
awake the reader's attention. But the personages of this tale are not
technically developed; they are gradually made transparent as they stand, until
we see them through and through. And what we thus behold is less individual
peculiarities than traits and devices of our general human nature, under the
stress of the given conditions. The individuals are there, and could at need be
particularlized sharply enough; but that part of them which we are concerned
with lies so far beneath the surface as inevitably to exhibit more of general
than of personal characteristics. The individual veils the general to the
extent of his individuality; and since the effect of "incident" is to emphasize
individuality, the best value of The Scarlet Letter had it been based on
incident, would have been impaired. As to postponing the reader's drowsiness,
-- victims of the Inquisition have slumbered upon the rack; and people who have
been kept too long awake over the sprightly subtleties of Zola, or the
Daedalian involutions of Mrs. Henry Wood, have doubtless yawned over the
revelation of Dimmesdale's soul, and grown heavy-eyed at the spectacle of
Pearl's elfish waywardness.
Dimmesdale is, artistically, a corollary of Hester; and yet the average writer
would not be apt to hit upon him as a probable seducer. The community in which
he abides certainly shows a commendable lack of suspicion towards him: even old
Mistress Hibbins whose scent for moral carrion was as keen as that of a modern
society journal, can scarcely credit her own conviction. "What mortal
imagination could conceive it!" whispers the old lady to Hester, as the
minister passes in the procession. "Many a church member saw I, walking behind
the music, who has danced in the same measure with me, when somebody was the
fiddler! That is but a trifle, when a woman knows the world. But this
minister!" It is, of course, this very refinement that makes him the more
available for the ends of the story. A gross, sensual man would render the
whole drama gross and obvious. But Dimmesdale's social position, as well as his
personal character, seems to raise him above the possibility of such a lapse.
This is essential to the scope of the treatment, which, dealing with the
spiritual aspects of the crime, requires characters of spiritual proclivities.
Hester's lover, then, shall be a minister, for the priest of that day "stood at
the head of the social system;" and, moreover, -- a main object of the story
being to show that no sacred vows nor sublime aspirations can relieve mortal
man from the common human liability to guilt, -- Dimmesdale himself must commit
the most fatal of the sins against which the priest is supposed to provide
protection; nay, he is the actual spiritual adviser of her whom he ruins. Young
and comely he must be, for the sake of the artistic harmony; but his physical
organization is delicate, he is morbidly conscientious and "the Creator never
made another being so sensitive as this." Highly intellectual he is, too,
though, as the author finely discriminates, not too broadly so. "In no state of
society would he have been what is called a man of liberal views; it would
always be essential to his peace to feel the pressure of a faith about him."
Nor has he ever "gone through an experience calculated to lead him beyond the
scope of generally received laws, although, in a single instance, he had so
fearfully transgressed one of the most sacred of them." It is by such subtle
but important reservations that the author's mastery of the character is
revealed: they would have escaped the average mind, which would thereby have
been perplexed to show why Dimmesdale did not follow Hester's example, and seek
relief by speculatively questioning the validity of all social institutions.
Nor would this average mind have been likely to perceive the weak point in such
a character, -- "that violence of passion, which, intermixed with more shapes
than one, with his higher, purer, softer qualities, was, in fact, the portion
of him which the devil claimed, and through which he sought to win the rest."
It is upon this flaw that Chillingworth puts his finger. "See now how passion
takes hold upon this man, and hurrieth him out of himself! As with one passion,
so with another! He hath done a wild thing ere now, this pious Master
Dimmesdale, in the hot passion of his heart!" For the rest, save in one
conspicuous instance, the minister plays Prometheus to the vulture
Chillingworth. As Hester suffers public exposure and frank ignominy, so he is
wrapped in secret torments; and either mode of punishment is shown to be
powerless for good. "Nervous sensibility and a vast power of self-restraint"
are leading features in the young man's character, and these, combined with his
refined selfishness, are what render him defenseless against Chillingworth.
Dimmesdale cares more for his social reputation than for anything else. His
self-respect, his peace, his love, his soul, -- all may go: only let his
reputation remain! And yet it is that selfsame false reputation that daily
causes him the keenest anguish of all.
Pearl, however, is the true creation of the book: every touch upon her portrait
is a touch of genius, and her very conception is an inspiration. Yet the
average mind would have found her an encumbrance. Every pretext would have been
improved to send her out of the room, as it were, and to restrict her
utterances, when she must appear, to monosyllables or sentimental commonplaces.
Not only is she free from repression of this kind, but she avouches herself the
most vivid and active figure in the story. Instead of keeping pathetically in
the background, as a guiltless unfortunate whose life was blighted before it
began, this strange little being, with laughing defiance of precedent and
propriety, takes the reins in her own childish hands, and dominates every one
with whom she comes in contact. This is an idea which it was left to Hawthorne
to originate: ancient nor modern fiction supplies a parallel to Pearl. "In
giving her existence, a great law had been broken. . . . The mother's
impassioned state had been the medium through which were transmitted to the
unborn infant the rays of its moral life. . . . Above all, the warfare of
Hester's spirit, at that epoch, was perpetuated in Pearl." The mother "felt
like one who has evoked a spirit, but, by some irregularity in the process of
conjuration, has failed to win the master-word that should control this new and
incomprehensible intelligence." Pearl instinctively comprehends her position as
a born outcast from the world of christened infants, and requites their scorn
and contumely with the bitterest hatred, -- a passion of enmity which she had
"inherited by inalienable right, out of Hester's heart." In her childish plays,
her ever-creative spirit communicated itself, with a wild energy and fertility
of invention, to a thousand unlikeliest objects; but -- and here again the
mother felt in her own heart the cause -- Pearl "never created a friend; she
seemed always to be sowing broadcast the dragon's teeth, whence sprang a
harvest of armed enemies, against whom she rushed to battle." And this strange
genesis of hers, placing her in a sphere of her own, gave also a phantom-like
quality to the impression she produced on Hester: just as a unique event,
especially an unpremeditated crime, seems unreal and dream-like in the
retrospect. Yet Pearl was, all the while, the most unrelentingly real fact of
her mother's ruined life.
Standing as the incarnation, instead of the victim, of a sin, Pearl affords a
unique opportunity for throwing light upon the inner nature of the sin itself.
In availing himself of it, Hawthorne touches ground which, perhaps, he would
not have ventured on, had he not first safeguarded himself against exaggeration
and impiety by making his analysis accord (so to speak) with the definition of
a child's personality. Pearl, as we are frequently reminded, is the scarlet
letter made alive, capable of being loved, and so endowed with a manifold power
of retribution for sin. The principle of her being is the freedom of a broken
law; she is developed, "a lovely and immortal flower, out of the rank
luxuriance of a guilty passion," yet, herself, as irresponsible and independent
as if distinctions of right and wrong did not exist to her. Like nature and
animals, she is anterior to moral law; but, unlike them, she is human, too. She
exhibits an unfailing vigor and vivacity of spirits joined to a precocious and
almost preternatural intelligence, especially with reference to her mother's
shameful badge. To this her interest constantly reverts, and always with a
"peculiar smile and odd expression of the eyes," they almost suggesting
acquaintance on her part with "the secret spell of her existence." The wayward,
mirthful mockery with which the small creature always approaches this hateful
theme, as if she deemed it a species of ghastly jest, is a terribly significant
touch, and would almost warrant a confirmation of the mother's fear that she
had brought a fiend into the world. Yet, physically, Pearl is "worthy to have
been left in Eden, to be the plaything of the angels," and her aspect -- as
must needs be the case with a child who symbolized a sin that finds its way
into all regions of human society -- "was imbued with the spell of infinite
variety: in this one child there were many children, comprehending the full
scope between the wild-flower prettiness of a peasant baby and the pomp, in
little, of an infant princess." The plan of her nature, though possibly
possessing an order of its own, was incompatible with the scheme of the rest of
the universe; in other words, the child could never, apparently, come into
harmony with her surroundings, unless the ruling destiny of the world should,
from divine, become diabolic. "I have no Heavenly Father!" she exclaims,
touching the scarlet letter on her mother's bosom with her small forefinger:
and how, indeed, could the result of an evil deed be good? There is "fire in
her and throughout her," as befits "the unpremeditated offshoot of a passionate
moment," and it is a fire that seems to have in it at least as much of an
infernal as of a heavenly ardor; and in her grim little philosophy, the scarlet
emblem is the heritage of the maturity of all her sex. "Will it not come of its
own accord, when I am a woman grown?" And yet she is a guiltless child, with
all a child's freshness and spontaneity.
This contrast, or, perhaps it is more correct to say, mingling, of the opposite
poles of being, sin and innocence, in Pearl's nature is an extraordinary
achievement; enabling us, as it does, to recognize the intrinsic ugliness of
sin. Pearl is like a beautiful but poisonous flower, rejoicing in its poison,
and receiving it as the vital element of life. But the beauty makes the
ugliness only the more impressive, because we feel it to be a magical or
phantasmal beauty, enticing like the apples of Sodom, but full of bitterness
within. It is the beauty which sin wears to the eyes of the tempted, -- a
beauty, therefore, which has no real existence, but is attributed by the
insanity of lust. Now, if Pearl were a woman, this strong external charm of
hers would perplex the reader, in much the same way that the allurements of sin
bewilder its votaries. The difficulty is to distinguish between what is really
and permanently good and what only appears so while the spell lasts. Pearl
being a child, however, no such uncertainty can occur. She has not, as yet,
what can in strictness be termed a character; she is without experience, and
therefore devoid of either good or evil principles; she possesses a nature, and
nothing more. The affection which she excites, consequently, is immediately
perceived to be due neither to her beauty not to her intellectual acuteness;
still less to the evil effluence which exhales from these, and is
characteristic of them. These things all stand on one side; and the innocent,
irresponsible infant soul stands on the other. Each defines and emphasizes the
other: so that so far from one being led to confuse them, so far from being in
danger of loving evil because we love Pearl, we love her just in proportion to
our abhorrence of the evil which empoisons her manifestations. The same
discrimination could not be so sharply made (if, indeed, it could be made at
all) in the case of a Pearl who, under unchanged conditions, had attained
maturity. For her character would then be formed, and the evil which came to
her by inheritance would so have tinged and moulded her natural traits that we
should inevitably draw in the poison and the perfume at a single breath, --
ascribe to evil the charm which derives from good, and pollute good with the
lurid hues of evil. The history of the race abundantly demonstrates that a
chief cause of moral perversity and false principle has been our assumption of
absolute proprietorship in either the good or the evil of our actions. Pearl,
still in the instinctive stage of development, shows us the way out of this
labyrinth. As the pure sunlight vivifies noxious as well as beneficent forms of
existence, so the evil proclivities of the child's nature are energized, though
not constituted, by the divine source of her being.
It would be interesting (parenthetically) to draw a parallel between Pearl and
Beatrice, in Rappaccini's Daughter. Both are studies in the same direction,
though from different standpoints. Beatrice is nourished upon poisonous plants,
until she becomes herself poisonous. Pearl, in the mysterious prenatal world,
imbibes the poison of her parents' guilt. But, in either instance, behind this
imported evil stands the personal soul: and the question is, Shall the soul
become the victim of its involuntary circumstances? Hawthorne, in both cases,
inclines to the brighter alternative. But the problem of Beatrice is more
complicated than that of Pearl. She was not born in guilt; but she was brought
up (to translate the symbolism) amidst guilty associations, so that they had
come to be the very breath of her life. They turn out powerless, however, to
vitiate her heart, and she is able to exclaim, at last, to her enraged lover,
"Was there not, from the first, more poison in thy nature than in mine?"
Although, for inscrutable purposes, God may see fit to incarnate us in evil,
our souls shall not thereby suffer corruption; possibly, indeed, such evil
incarnation may draw off harmlessly, because unconsciously, some deadlier evil
lurking in the spirit, which would else have destroyed both soul and body.
Pearl, on the other hand, has an unexceptionable moral environment: her evil is
not, like Beatrice's, imbibed from without, but is manifested from within; and
if "what cometh out of the mouth defileth a man," her predicament would seem
hopeless. But, in truth, Pearl's demon was summoned into existence, not by her
own acts, but by the act of others; and, unless with her own conscious consent,
it cannot pollute her. Meanwhile, with that profound instinct of
self-justification which antedates both reason and conscience in the human
soul, the child is impelled on all occasions to assert and vindicate her cause,
-- the cause of the scarlet letter. She will not consent to have it hidden or
disavowed. She mocks and persecutes her mother, so long as the latter would
disguise from her the true significance of the badge. When Hester casts it
away, she stamps and cries with passion and will not be pacified till it is
replaced. She distrusts the minister, save when, as in his plea for Hester in
the governor's hall and his midnight vigil on the scaffold, he approaches an
acknowledgment of his true position. His promise to appear with her mother and
herself "at the great Judgment Day" excites her scorn. "Thou wast not bold,
thou wast not true!" she cries. "Thou wouldst not promise to take my hand and
mother's hand, to-morrow noontide!" -- and she washes from her forehead the
kiss he gives her during the interview in the forest. In a word, she will have
truth in all things: without truth nothing is good; nor, with truth, can
anything be evil. In the deepest sense, this is not only true, but it is the
truth of the book. The perfectibility of man being infinite, the best man and
the worst man alike must fall infinitely short of perfection: but every one can
account honestly for such talents as he has; and it is always the motive, never
the achievement, the sincerity, not the sound, that Divine Justice regards. A
Thug, who should devoutly believe in the holiness of his mission, would fare
better than an evangelist, who should lead a thousand souls to salvation, not
for God's glory, but for his own. So when little Pearl would frankly unfold the
banner of the scarlet letter, and openly fight beneath it, we feel that God
will give her victory, not over her apparent enemies, but over herself.
She is so much alive as to live independently of her actual appearances in the
story. The imagination which there bodies her forth has done its work so well
as to have imparted somewhat of its own power to the reader; and we can picture
Pearl in other scenes and at other epochs in her career, and can even argue of
her fate, had the conditions been different for her. Suppose, for example, that
Hester and the minister had made good their escape from Boston, or that the
latter's confession had been delayed until Pearl had passed the age of puberty.
In either of these or a dozen other possible alternatives, the progress of her
growth would have had a new and important interest, conducting to fresh regions
of speculation. But Hawthorne never allows the claims of a part to override the
whole; the artist in him would permit nothing out of its due proportion; and
Pearl, for all her untamable vitality, is kept strictly to her place and
function in the story. Where she speaks one word for her personal, she speaks
two for her representative, character. There seems to be no partiality on the
author's part; nor, on the other hand, is there any indifference. The same
quiet light of charity irradiates each figure in the tale; and he neither makes
a pet of Pearl, nor a scapegoat of Roger Chillingworth.
Dramatically, the last-named personage plays perhaps the most important part of
the four; he communicates to the plot whatever movement it exhibits. But what
renders him chiefly remarkable is the fact that, although he stands as the
injured husband, and therefore with the first claim to our sympathy and
kindness, he in reality obtains neither, but appears more devoid of attraction
than any other character in the tale. This would seem an unconventional and
rather venturesome proceeding; for the average mind, in modern English fiction,
finds itself under moral obligations to use every precaution, lest the reader
fall into some mistake as to the legitimate objects of favor and of
reprobation. Continental novelists, to be sure, have a sort of perverse
pleasure in defying Anglo-Saxon taste in this particular, and do not shrink
from making the lawful partner of the erring wife either odious or ridiculous.
But it will be profitable to inquire in what respect the American romancer
follows or diverges from these two methods of treatment.
It is evident, of course, that the fact that a man has suffered injury has
nothing to say, one way or the other, as to his personal character; and the
only reason why a novelist should represent him as amiable rather than the
reverse is (in an instance like the present) that the reader might otherwise,
in disliking him, be led to regard too leniently the crime of which he is the
victim. Hester Prynne and Dimmesdale, however, are not so presented as to
invite such misplaced tenderness on the reader's part; while Chillingworth, on
the other hand, though certainly not a lovable, is very far from being an
absurd or contemptible, figure. The force, reserve, and dignity of his demeanor
win our respect at the outset, and the touches of quiet pathos in his first
interview with Hester prepare us to feel a more cordial sentiment. But the
purpose of the author is more profound and radical than could be fulfilled by
this obvious and superficial way of dealing with the situation. His attitude is
not that of a sentimental advocate, but of an impartial investigator; he is
studying the nature and effect of sinful passions, and is only incidentally
concerned with the particular persons who are the exponents thereof. He
therefore declines, as we are not long in finding out, to allow the course of
events to be influenced by the supposed moral rights or wrongs of either party.
He simply penetrates to the heart of each, and discloses the secrets hidden
there, -- secrets whose general and permanent vastly outweighs their personal
and particular significance. The relation of Chillingworth to the lovers has
been pronounced, by an able critic, the most original feature of the book. But
it did not so appear to the author's mind. It was a necessary outcome of his
plan, and seems more original than the rest only because the pervading
originality of the whole happens to be more strikingly visible in Chillingworth
than elsewhere. But given Hester and the minister, and the punishment inflicted
upon the former, and Chillingworth becomes inevitable. For the controlling
purpose of the story, underlying all other purposes, is to exhibit the various
ways in which guilt is punished in this world, -- whether by society, by the
guilty persons themselves, or by interested individuals who take the law into
their own hands. The method of society has been exemplified by the affixing of
the scarlet letter on Hester's bosom. This is her punishment, the heaviest that
man can afflict upon her. But, like all legal punishment, it aims much more at
the protection of society than at the reformation of the culprit. Hester is to
stand as a warning to others tempted as she was: if she recovers her own
salvation in the process, so much the better for her; but, for better or
worse, society has ceased to have any concern with her. "We trample you down,"
society says in effect to those who break its laws, "not by any means in order
to save your soul, -- for the welfare of that problematical adjunct to your
civic personality is a matter of complete indifference to us, -- but because,
by some act, you have forfeited your claim to our protection, because you are a
clog to our prosperity, and because the spectacle of your agony may discourage
others of similar unlawful inclinations." But it is obvious, all the while,
that the only crime which society recognizes is the crime of being found out,
since a society composed of successful hypocrites would much more smoothly
fulfill all social requirements than a society of such heterogeneous
constituents as (human nature being what it is) necessarily enter into it now.
In a word, society, as at present administered, presents the unhandsome
spectacle of a majority of successful hypocrites, on one side, contending
against a minority of discovered criminals, on the other; and we are reduced to
this paradox, -- that the salvation of humanity depends primarily on the
victory of the criminals over the hypocrites. Of course, this is only another
way of saying that hypocrisy is the most destructive to the soul of all sins;
and meanwhile we may comfort ourselves with the old proverb that hypocrisy
itself is the homage which vice pays to virtue, or, if the inward being of
society were in harmony with its outward seeming, heaven would appear on
earth.
Hester, then, the social outcast, finds no invitation to repentance in the law
that crushes her. The only alternative it offers her is abject self-extinction,
or defiance. She chooses the latter: but at this point her course is swayed by
a providential circumstance with which society had nothing to do. "Man had
marked this woman's sin by a scarlet letter, which had such potent and
disastrous efficacy that no human sympathy could reach her, save it were sinful
like herself. God, as a direct consequence of the sin which man had thus
punished, had given her a lovely child, whose place was on that same dishonored
bosom, to connect her parent forever with the race and descent of mortals, and
to be finally a blessed soul in heaven." The sacred obligation of maternity --
the more sacred to Hester because it seems the only sacred thing left to her --
restrains her from plunging recklessly into the abyss of sin, towards which her
punishment would naturally impel her. "Make my excuse to him, so please you,"
she says, with a triumphant smile, to old Mistress Hibbins, in response to the
latter's invitation to meet the Black Man in the forest. "I must tarry at home
and keep watch over my little Pearl. Had they taken her from me, I would
willingly have gone with thee into the forest, and signed my name in the Black
Man's book too, and that with mine own blood!" But although she is thus saved
from further overt degradation, she is as far from repentance as ever.
Standing, as she did, alone with Pearl amidst a hostile world, her life turned,
in a great measure, from passion and feeling to thought. She cast away the
fragments of a broken chain. The world's law was no law for her mind. She
assumed a freedom of speculation which her neighbors, had they known it, would
have held to be a deadlier crime than that stigmatized by the scarlet letter.
Shadowy guests entered her lonesome cottage that would have been as perilous as
demons to their entertainer, could they have been seen so much as knocking at
her door. "There was wild and ghastly scenery all around her, and a home and
comfort nowhere. At times, a fearful doubt strove to possess her soul, whether
it were not better to send Pearl at once to Heaven, and go herself to such
futurity as Eternal Justice might provide. The scarlet letter had not done its
office."
Such being the result of society's management of the matter, let us see what
success attended the efforts of an individual to take the law into his own
hands. It is to exemplify this phase of the subject that Roger Chillingworth
exists; and his operations are of course directed not against Hester ("I have
left thee to the scarlet letter," he says to her. "If that have not avenged me,
I can do no more!"), but against her accomplice. This accomplice is unknown;
that is, society has not found him out. But he is known to himself, and
consequently to Roger Chillingworth, who is a symbol of a morbid and
remorseless conscience. Chillingworth has been robbed of his wife. But between
that and other kinds of robbery there is this difference, -- that he who is
robbed wishes not to recover what is lost, but to punish the robber. And his
object in inflicting this punishment is not the robber's good, nor the wife's
good, nor even the public good; but revenge, pure and simple. The motive or
passion which actuates him, is, in short, a wholly selfish one. It was deeply
provoked, no doubt; but so, also, in another way, was the crime which it would
requite. Unlike the latter, moreover, it involves no risk; on the contrary, it
is enforced by the whole weight of social opinion. If the man had really or
unselfishly loved his wife, he would not act thus. His wish would be to shield
her, -- to protect the sanctity of the marriage relation, as typified in her,
from further pollution. His hostility to the seducer, even, would be more
public than personal, -- hatred of the sin, not of the individual; for men
support with considerable equanimity the destruction of other men's married
happiness. But, by bringing the matter to the personal level, Chillingworth
confesses his indifference to any but personal considerations, not to mention
his disbelief in God. As regards religion, indeed, he declares himself a
fatalist. "My old faith," he says to Hester, "explains all that we do and all
that we suffer. By thy first step awry thou didst plant the germ of evil; but
since that moment it has all been a dark necessity. Ye that have wronged me are
not sinful, save in a kind of typical illusion; neither am I fiend-like, who
have snatched a fiend's office from his hands. It is our fate. Let the black
flower blossom as it may!" Accordingly, Chillingworth is an image in little of
society; and the external difference between his action and that of society is
due to unlikeness not of inward motive, but of outward conditions. The revenge
of society consists in publishing the sinner's ignominy. But this method would
baffle Chillingworth's revenge just where he designed it to be most effective;
for, by leaving the sinner with no load of secret guilt in his heart, it is
inadvertently merciful in its very unmercifulness. The real agony of sin, as
Chillingworth clearly perceived, lies not in its commission, which is always
delightful, nor in its open punishment, which is a kind of relief, but in the
dread of its discovery. The revenge which he plans, therefore, depends above
all things upon keeping his victim's secret. By rejecting all brutal and
obvious methods he gains entrance into a much more sensitive region of torture.
He will not poison Hester's babe, because he knows that it will live to cause
its mother the most poignant pangs she is capable of feeling. He will not
sacrifice Hester, because "what could I do better for my object than to let
thee live, than to give thee medicines against all harm and peril of life, so
that this burning shame may still blaze upon thy bosom?" And, finally, he will
not reveal the minister's guilt. "Think not," he says, "that I shall, to my own
loss, betray him to the gripe of the law. . . . Let him live! Let him hide
himself in outward honor, if he may! Not the less he shall be mine!" And
afterwards, when years had vindicated the diabolical accuracy of his judgment,
"Better he had died at once!" he exclaims, in horrible triumph. "He fancied
himself given over to a fiend, to be tortured with frightful dreams and
desperate thoughts, the sting of remorse and despair of pardon, as a foretaste
of what awaits him beyond the grave. But it was the constant shadow of my
presence, the closest propinquity of the man whom he had most vilely wronged,
and who had grown to exist only by this perpetual poison of the direst
revenge!" But this carnival of refined cruelty, as is abundantly evident, can
be productive of nothing but evil to all concerned; evil to the victim, and
still more evil, if possible, to the executioner, who, finding himself
transformed by his own practices from a peaceful scholar to a fiend, makes
Dimmesdale answerable for the calamity, and proposes to wreak fresh vengeance
upon him on that account. And it demonstrates the truth that the only
punishment which man is justified in inflicting upon his fellow is the
punishment which is incidental to his being restrained from further indulgence
in crime. Such restraint acts as a punishment, because the wicked impulse is
thereby prevented from realizing itself; but it is intrinsically an act not of
revenge, but of love, since the criminal is thereby preserved from increasing
his sinful burden by accomplishing in fact what he had purposed in thought. The
Puritan system was selfish and brutal, merely; Chillingworth's was satanically
malignant; but both alike are impotent to do anything but inflame the evils
they pretend to assuage.
Thus it comes to pass that after "seven years," or any greater or less lapse of
time, the culprits are just as remote from true repentance as they were at the
moment of commiting their sin. Society and the individual have both
demonstrated their incapacity to deal with the great problem of human error.
Neither suppression nor torture is of any avail. The devil is always anxious to
be enlisted against himself, but his reasons are tolerably transparent. When,
at length, Hester and Dimmesdale meet again, they are ripe to fall more deeply
and irrevocably than before. The woman faces the prospect boldly, thinking more
of her lover than of herself; he trembles in his flesh, but is willing in his
heart; but there is no sincere hesitation on either side. One hour of genuine
remorse would have given them insight to perceive that no such shallow device
as flight could bring them peace; for it would have shown them that the source
of their misery was not the persecution suffered from without, but the inward
violation committed by themselves. Chillingworth comprehends the situation
perfectly, and quietly makes his preparations, not to obstruct their escape,
but to accompany it. This is the most hideous episode in the story, and well
represents the bottomless slough of iniquity which awaits the deliberate choice
of evil. And it elevates Chillingworth into the bad eminence of chief criminal
of the three. Not only is his actual wickedness greater, but the extenuation is
less. The lovers might plead their love, but he only his hate. They can ask
each other's forgiveness and implore God's mercy, when, in that final death
scene of "triumphant ignoniminy," they make the utmost atonement in their
power; but for Chillingworth, the merciless and unforgiving, there can be no
forgiveness and no mercy. "When, in short, there was no more devil's work for
him to do, it only remained for the unhumanized mortal to betake himself
whither his master would find him tasks enough, and pay him his wages duly."
This interpretation of his character may profitably be pondered by the student
of the human soul. From the fate of Hester and Dimmesdale we may learn that it
avails not the sinner to live a life of saintly deeds and aims, but to be true;
not to scourge himself, to wear sackcloth, or to redeem other souls, but openly
to accept his shame. The poison of sin is not so much in the sin itself as in
the concealment; for all men are sinners, but he who conceals his sin pretends
a superhuman holiness. To acknowledge our sins before God, in the ordinary
sense of the phrase, is a phrase, and no more, unproductive of absolution. But
to acknowledge our sins before men is, in very truth, to acknowledge them
before God; for the appeal is made to the human conscience, and the human
conscience is the miraculous presence of God in human nature, and from such
acknowledgment absolution is not remote. The reason is that such acknowledgment
surrenders all that is most dear to the unregenerate heart, and thereby
involves a humiliation or annihilation of evil pride which eradicates sinful
appetite. All sin is based on selfishness; but the supreme abdication of self,
postulated by voluntary and unreserved self-revelation, leaves no further basis
for sin to build on. The man who has never been guilty of actual sin is
peculiar rather than fortunate; but in all events he has no cause to pride
himself on the immunity, which indicates at best that he has been spared
adequate temptation. The sins forbidden in the decalogue are fatal only after
the sinner has deliberately said, "Evil, be thou my good!" or, in the sublime
figure of the Scripture, has blasphemed the Holy Ghost. Hester and Dimmesdale,
in the story, stop short of taking this step, but Chillingworth actually begins
by taking it. It is the unpardonable sin, not because God is wanting in mercy
towards it, but because its very nature is to cause its perpetrator to withdraw
himself from all mercy. He hugs it to himself as a virtue, as the virtue of
virtues; and the more lost he becomes, the more virtuous does he fancy himself
to be. It consists, broadly speaking, in disowning one's human brotherhood and
laying claim (on whatever pretext) to personal and peculiar favor at God's
hands. Such a person will contemplate with complacency the damnation of all the
rest of mankind, so that his own hold upon the divine approbation be secure. In
his earlier pieces (notably in The Man of Adamant, and Ethan Brand), Hawthorne
has more than once touched upon this subject, but in the story Roger
Chillingworth he gives it a larger development. Chillingworth starts with the
notion that he has a right to inflict vengeance. It is a very common notion;
many respectable persons possess it; indeed, it is not only compatible with
social respectability, but is favorable to it. But vengeance, when prosecuted
with the deliberation and circumspection observed by Chillingworth, has this
singular quality, -- that it gives free indulgence to the most cruel and
infernal passions of which the human heart is capable, unmodified by any fear
of social odium; though here, and throughout, a marked distinction should be
made between the idea of society as at present organized and that of mankind or
humanity; the former being a purely artificial parody and perversion of the
divinely beneficent order of which we already catch occasional glimpses in the
latter. This peculiarity of vengeance first stupefies the voice of conscience
in the perpetrator, and thereafter has him in complete subjection, and can lead
him through the depths of the bottomless pit without his once suspecting that
he is out of arm's reach of the archangels. Roger Chillingworth is a good
citizen, his private and public reputation are spotless, he is on the best of
terms with the governor and the clergy, and his intellectual ability and
scientific attainments beget him general respect and admiration. No social test
can be applied to him from which he will not emerge unscathed. His hypocrisy is
without flaw; it deceives even himself. He is the complete type of the man of
the world, the social ideal, -- courteous, quiet, well informed, imperturbable.
Nevertheless, his moral nature is a poisonous and irreclaimable wilderness, in
which blooms not a single flower of heavenly parentage. For he has put his
devilish lust of vengeance in the place of God, and day by day he worships it,
and performs its bidding. Well might Dimmesdale exclaim, "There is one worse
than even the polluted priest! That old man's revenge has been blacker than my
sin. He has violated, in cold blood, the sanctity of a human heart." Yet
society has no stigma to fix upon his breast.
Hawthorne, however, with characteristic charity, forbears to claim a verdict
even against his reprobate. "To all," he says, "we would fain be merciful;" and
he goes so far as to put forth a speculation as to whether "hatred and love be
not the same thing at bottom." But hatred grows from self-love; and if love and
self-love be not opposites, then neither are light and darkness, or good and
evil. It is doubtless true, on the other hand, that we can never be justified
in treating the most iniquitous persons as identical with their iniquity,
although, in discussing them, it may not always be possible to make the verbal
discrimination. In real life there will always be saving clauses, mitigating
circumstances, and special conditions whereby the naked crudity of the abstract
presentment is modified, as soil and vegetation soften the hard contour of
rocks, or as the atmosphere diffuses light and tempers darkness.
Nor would I wish to appear as superserviceably detecting theories in the mellow
substance of Hawthorne's artistic conceptions. He himself felt a repugnance to
theories, and in general confined himself to suggestions and intimations; he
knew how apt truth is to escape from the severity of a "logical deduction."
Probably, moreover, he was uniformly innocent of any didactic purpose in
sitting down to write. He imagined a moral situation, with characters to fit
it, and then allowed the theme to grow in such form as its innate force
directed, enriching its roots and decorating its boughs with the accumulated
wealth of his experience and meditation. In an ordinary novel of episode this
system might be an unsafe one to pursue, there being no essential law of
development for such things: they are constructed, but do not grow; and if the
constructive skill be deficient, there is nothing else to keep them
symmetrical. The tree or the flower has only to be planted aright, and wisely
watched and tended, and it will make good its own excuse for being; but the
house or the ship depends absolutely on the builder. The reason is, of course,
that the former, unlike the latter, have a life and a design in themselves. And
this, it seems to me, is the difference between stories in Hawthorne's vein and
other stories. He is the most modern of writers; he has divined the new birth
of literature, which is still unsuspected by most of us, to judge by the
present indications. Hitherto, in fiction, we have been content to imitate
life, but such imitation has been carried as near to perfection as, perhaps, is
profitable. The next step is a great one, but it cannot be shunned, unless we
would return upon our tracks, and vamp up afresh the costumes of the past. And
what is this new step? It is not easy to put the definition in words; and
certainly it is not intended that we should turn to and write like Hawthorne.
But what lies beyond or above an imitation of life? Nothing more nor less, it
must be confessed, than life itself. This is a hard saying, but I know not how
we are to escape giving ear to it; doubtless, however, a majority of persons
will decline to believe, on any terms or in any sense, that a novel or story
can ever be exalted from an imitation of life into life itself. And yet
Shakespeare's plays are more than imitations of life; and so, it appears to me,
is a story like The Scarlet Letter. The plays live, the story is alive. A soul
is in it; it is conceived on the spiritual plane. The soul assumes a body, like
other souls, and this body may be seen and handled; but the body exists because
the soul, beforehand, is, and the latter is independent of the former. How this
life may be imparted is another question; but, unquestionably, the process can
be no easy one. He who gives life can have no life to give save his own. It is
not a matter of note-books, of observation, of learning, of cleverness. The
workshop from which issue works that live is a very interior chamber indeed;
and only those who have entered it, perhaps not even they, can reveal its
secrets.
Discreet readers will not construe me too literally when I venture the opinion
that the day of dead or galvanized fiction is coming to an end. Let the
circulating libraries have no misgivings; nothing is more certain than that,
for many a day and year to come, their shelves will groan, as of yore, with
admirable examples of the class alluded to. Moreover, Shakespeare lived a long
while ago, and Homer and Moses longer yet; so that it might seem as if the
threatened danger were safely astern of us, not to mention that, just at
present, there seems to be a more than ordinary quantity of cunningly wrought
waxen images on hand. As against those arguments and indications, it can only
be urged that the progress of the human race probably implies much more than
electricity and steering-balloons would prepare us for; and that the true
conquest of matter by mind, being a religious rather than a scientific
transaction is likely to be felt, obscurely and vaguely, long before it can be
definitely comprehended and acknowledged.
Julian Hawthorne, The Atlantic Monthly, April 1886.
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