Wednesday, January 22, 2020
The Scarlet Letter and Aunt Jennifers Tigers :: comparison compare contrast essays
      The Scarlet Letter and Aunt Jennifer's Tigers                         In the course of our life we need  to make many decisions.  The way     we live our life is a decision each person makes for him/herself.   Usually,     one choice is better than the other, yet society doesn't always support  the     better one.  The poem, "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" and The Scarlet  Letter     present two ways in which women can react to a society dominated by men  and     how their lives are shaped by their different decisions.  A woman can  just     ignore the restraints put on her and suffer, or she can challenge men's     authority and enjoy her life.                         In a society where men choose the  standards, Hester follows her own     set of rules.  She is independent, unrestrained and makes her own  decisions.      The reader's first view of Hester's uniqueness in The Scarlet Letter,  is     the scarlet letter.  Hester has transformed the society's sign of  guilt     into her own work of art by decoration the "A" with elegant stitching and     golden thread.  Her interpretation of the punishment clashes with that  of     her neighbors, and she is not reluctant to stress their contrast of     opinions.  She does not fear men, as most women did in her time.   It was     mandatory in her society that  women respected their husbands, and did  what     the men ordered.  Hester fears neither the leaders of the community nor  her     husband.  She demonstrates her confidence by standing up to a group of  the     most respected men in town, when she hears they might take her daughter,     Pearl, away from her.  She even has the courage to demand the minister  for     his help.  "I will not give her up!"  She firmly states. "Speak  thou for me...     Thou knowest what is in my heart, and what are a mother's rights...Look  thou     to it!  I will not lose the child!  Look to it!"   (Ch.8).  She refuses to     let the power of the men intimidate her, and gets what she wants.   While     most women of Hester's time did whatever their husband ordered them to  do,     Hester refused to keep a secret that Chillingworth asked her to.   She     wanted to disclose the evil that her husband was placing upon Dimmesdale.     "I must reveal the secret, he must discern thee in thy true character.  					    
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