The Scarlet Letter Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory

The Prison Door

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) After the little Custom-House intro, Hawthorne dumps us right in the middle of the Puritan community, at a door that's "heavily timbered with oak,...

Pearl, Hester's Daughter

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) If you want to know about Pearl as a person, check out her "Character Analysis." But she's just as much a symbol as she is a character in her own righ...

The Scarlet Letter

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) Hester's scarlet letter is a hardworking symbol. At various times, it symbolizes adultery, sin, hard work, skill, charity, righteousness, sacredness,...

The Red Mark on Dimmesdale's Chest

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) Hester isn't the only one with a symbol on her chest; Dimmesdale has one, too. In blood. But we can't quite figure this mark out. It's the physical ma...

The Meteor

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) Life in the 21st century sure is boring. We may have iThings and FaceFinds, but we don't have meteors-in-the-shape-of-an-A and exploding stars and bl...

The Black Man

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) The Black Man is a euphemism for Satan in this book: Hester considers the scarlet letter A to be the Black Man's mark, and Pearl wonders aloud if the...

The Forest and the Wilderness

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) To the townspeople, the forest is the unknown. It's outside of the town, it's full of American Indians and scary creatures, and, worst of all, it's ut...

The Custom House

(Click the symbolism infographic to download.) If you snoozed through the little introductory appetizer to The Scarlet Letter, we won't tell. (Shmoop will never tell.) The language is particularly...