The Scarlet Letter by Hugues Merlem 1861.
Hester Prynne and daughter Pearl are in the foreground and Arthur Dimmesdale and
Roger Chillingworth can be seen dimly in the background at left.
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On March 16, 1850 Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The
Scarlet Letter, widely regarded as the first great American novel was issued by Ticknor, Reed & Fields, the publisher of choice for the New
England transcendentalist literary elite.
Nathanial
Hathorne was born in 1804 in Salem, Massachusetts, a member
of an old family that, much to his chagrin and embracement, included one
of the judges of the Salem
Witch Trials. He later added a w to the spelling of the family name in a vain attempt to disguise the
connection.
After his sea
captain father died when he was two, his family family sent him to be fostered
with wealthy local relatives who saw
that the boy was educated Bowden College in Maine,
which aspired to be the Harvard of the North and which was considerably cheaper than the Harvard of Massachusetts. Among his classmates were lifelong friends Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow and Franklin Pierce. A shy and brooding young man, but strikingly handsome, he wished only to
write.
Despite a receding hair line, Nathaniel Hawthorne was still matinee idol handsome in this 1848 Daguerreotype taken two years before the publication of his masterpiece.
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A Democrat in ultra Whig Massachusetts
he was able to secure political
appointments at the Boston Custom House to support himself as he wrote. He published an undistinguished first novel anonymously and sold short stories to various literary magazines. His first collection of short stories Twice-Told Tales drew local interest in Boston. He began to move in the intellectual orbit of the emerging Transcendentalists.
Hawthorne courted Elizabeth,
the eldest of the brilliant Peabody Sisters, but
to everyone’s surprise, especially
the heart broken Elizabeth, proposed to her frail sister Sophia, an artist.
The Peabodys were always in a condition of dire genteel poverty.
Hawthorne decided to raise money
for his marriage by investing a $1000 and joining the Brook Farm community. He was put in charge of the manure pile. It was not a happy experience and he soon departed. He later satirized
the community in his Blithedale Romance.
The lovely but sickly Sophia Peabody married Hawthorne and her health
improved. She ended up out living him by seven years. Her charcoal
self-portrait.
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Sofia and Hawthorne married in 1842
anyway and moved to the epicenter of
Transcendentalist life, Concord where they lived for three
years in The Old Manse, later the home of Longfellow. While
there he completed a second story collection Mosses from an Old Manse
The couple were madly in love
and devoted to each other.
In 1846 with the return to power of the Democrats in Washington, Hawthorne got the lucrative
appointment as Inspector of Revenue
at the Port of Salem. The move back to his—and Sophia’s—home town was a mixed blessing. On one hand
his growing family was secure. On the other hand the dreary duties of the custom house sapped his energy for writing. But he
did have time to explore the legacy of Puritan morality. When the
Whig’s return ousted him from his position, he turned those musings into The Scarlet Letter.
The shocking tale of the noble but
fallen Hester Prynne
and the tormented Rev.
Dimmsdale, as sexually
predatory preacher who was the cause
of Hester’s shame, was a literary sensation and one of the first American best sellers. More than 2,500 copies flew off of bookstore shelves in the first ten days.
Hawthorne moved his family to a farm
house near Lenox in the Berkshire Mountains of
western Massachusetts to dedicate
himself to writing. While there he met and became fast friends with Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., the physician, wit, and poet, and Herman
Melville, to whom he became a mentor. During these years he completed The
House of the Seven Gables, The Blithedale Romance, and his collection of classic mythology for
children, The Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys.
The Wayside, formerly the Concord home of Bronson Alcott and his family including young Louisa May, was twice Hathorne's home.
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Summers
in the mountains were pleasant but winters brutal and lonely. The family moved once again, this time back to Concord into
the old home of Bronson Alcott where Ralph Waldo
Emerson and Henry David Thoreau were neighbors and close friends. He named
the house The Wayside. He also found time to complete a campaign biography for old pal Franklin
Pierce.
When Pierce won the Presidency,
Hawthorne was rewarded with appointment as United States Consul in Liverpool. After his appointment lapsed when the Pierce administration ended, Hawthorne and Sophie
made the grand tour of Europe
before returning to Concord and the Wayside.
He completed and published the Marble Faun in 1860 and
was working sporadically on several
other romances.
But Hawthorne’s health was failing. In 1864 Pierce took him back to the
Berkshires to restore his health.
Hawthorne died there with his old friend at his bedside at Plymouth,
New Hampshire on May 18, 1864.
At his funeral in Concord
Longfellow, Emerson, Alcott, and Holmes were among his pallbearers. Sophia died in London
seven years later. In 2006 her
remains and those of their daughter Una were relocated to the Sleepy
Hollow Cemetery in Concord and laid
next to Hawthorn’s.
The
Scarlet Letter became a staple of
20th Century high school English classes,
although it has increasingly been protested
by fundamentalist parents who
think that Hester got just what was coming to her, the little slut, and
sometimes banned by timid or rightwing dominated school boards.
Meanwhile being branded by a scarlet letter became a widely used cultural metaphor for public shaming and mob mentality bullying.
The semi-salacious nature of the plot
made it a natural for several stage and film adaptations. The first movie version was a 1911 one
reel film King Baggot, Lucille Young, and William Robert Daly shifted the focus to Baggot, then a major star as the tortured
Dimmsdale. Hester fared better in the
third version released in 1926 as a prestige
MGM feature with their biggest melodrama
star, Lillian Gish. Colleen
Moore, Hardie Albright, and Henry B. Walthall, the star of Birth
of a Nation, were featured in the first sound version, a 1934 release shot on location at Salem’s Pioneer
Village. German director Wim Wenders made a European film starring Senta
Berger in 1973 which has seldom been shown in the United States.
In 1995 Demi Moore, Gary Oldman, and Robert
Duval headlined a star studded
cast. But the film took great liberties with the novel and was roundly mocked—the film review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a 14% approval rating, based on 35 reviews. It won the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst
Remake or Sequel and Moore was nominated for Worst Actress.
There was also a Public Broadcasting System miniseries made
by WBGH in Boston in 1979 as an answer to
the tony BBC costume/literary dramas
that dominated the public airways. The production featured Meg Foster, John Heard, and Kevin
Conway.
And inevitably there were porn
versions and take offs. Yes, you can see up-close and personal just how Hester earned the A.
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