( )tells a simple but very moving story in which four people living in a Puritan community are involved in and affected by the sin of adultery in different ways.
( )is one of the most ambivalent writers in the American literary history.
One source of evil that Hawthorne is concerned most is ( ).
(P434 ) ( ) is not a fictional character in The Scarlet Letter.
The Marble Faun by Nathaniel Hawthorne, a romance set in ( ), is concerned about the dark aberrations of the human spirit.
Hawthorne intended to ( )in The Scarlet Letter.
The Scarlet Letter always regarded as the best of Hawthorne's works, tells a simple but moving story in which four people living in a( )community are involved in and affected by the sin of adultery in different ways.
Hawthorne's intellectuals are usually( ), dreadful because they are devoid of warmth and feeling.
The Blithedale Romance is a novel ( ) wrote to reveal his own experiences on the Brook Farm and his own methods as a psychological novelist.
There is not much action, or physical movement going on in()'s works and he is good at exploring the complexity of human psychology.
The Blithedale Romance is a novel Hawthorne wrote to reveal his own experiences ( ).
Among Hawthorne's works( ), is always regarded as the best.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's literary world turns out to be a most disturbed, problematical and ( ) one which is possible to imagine.
()believed that"the wrong doing of one generation lives into the successive ones."
()was based on the tradition of a curse pronounced on the author's family when his great-grandfather was a judge in the Salem witchcraft trials.
In almost every book Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote, he discusses evil and ( ).
Hawthorne's literary world turns out to be a most disturbed, tormented and( )one possible to imagine.
Imbued with an inquiring imagination, an intensely meditative mind, and unceasing interest in the"interior of the heart" of man's being,()remains one of the most interesting, yet most ambivalent writers in the American literary history.
In almost every book by Hawthorne, he discusses sin and( ).
Hawthorne intended to( )in The Scarlet Letter.