Monday, October 18, 2010
Re-reading The Scarlet Letter
So I'm currently re-reading The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. I'm pretty sure every kid in America had to read this classic at some point during his or her pre-college education, and for good reason. Hawthorne is definitely a genius with words. Even his Introductory chapter, "The Custom House," has some brilliant moments in it. However, reading it again as an adult, without being forced to by a public education syllabus, allows me to be a bit more rationally critical. And I just have to ask: Does anyone else think he kind of blathers on a little too much? I mean, some of these chapters are rather repetitive. I know writers were more verbose at that time, but still. I think this novel could actually be quite a bit shorter. But maybe that's just me.
Labels:
classics,
Hawthorne,
The Scarlet Letter
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I do not know darling. The Scarlet letter was more of an enchantment than a book. It was created for specific spell remembrance of a society more than a specific tail. You should know darling. Your still a woman of the mine.
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stinky butt.
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