Wednesday, January 27, 2016

How does the introduction, "The Custom House," relate to the novel The Scarlet Letter?I read "The Custom House," and to me it relates to the...

Much argument has taken place over the importance of “The
Custom House” in Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. Certainly, most
high school students probably find it somewhat dense compared to the rest of the
narrative. As a result, many high school teachers skip this section of the novel in
their teaching.



This fact is unfortunate as “The
Custom House” really sets the stage for the rest of the novel. In it the reader is
introduced to the narrator, who shares many similarities with Nathaniel Hawthorne. 
These similarities are so numerous that one can argue that it is actually Hawthorne
narrating the tale even though the narrator never truly identifies himself. Indeed much
controversy ensued after the original publication of the novel. Many of Hawthorne’s
political enemies criticized “The Custom House” as they viewed this section as a
personal attack from Hawthorne. Beyond the narrator, the introduction also relates how
Hester Prynne’s story came to be discovered and how the story became a romance.



Likewise, “The Custom House” establishes the
seemingly self-righteous tone that the narrator uses throughout the story. The criticism
the narrator has for the political machinery and custom house employees of the early
nineteenth century is soon transferred to the magistrates and townspeople of late
seventeenth-century New England. Thus, the introduction to this novel is exactly what it
should be and for that reason should also be read, studied, and taught along with the
primary narrative.

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