The Scarlet Letter Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

How is the man standing on the outskirts described?

A cloaked stranger with no distinctive features.

A man dressed in Indian attire with deformed shoulders and a wise face.

Descriptive detail and symbolism are doing the work here. The man on the outskirts is presented in foreign dress—Indian attire—which immediately marks him as outside the Puritan town’s familiar world and signals a sense of otherness or mystery. The note of deformed shoulders adds a physical peculiarity that Hawthorne often links to inner complexity or hidden burdens, suggesting there’s more to this figure than meets the eye. The wise face further implies that he possesses knowledge, experience, or insight, hinting that he may influence events or characters in subtle, potentially unsettling ways. Together, these details create a portrait of a figures who is both intriguing and somewhat ominous, setting up expectations about his role in the story. The other descriptions don’t combine foreign dress, unusual physicality, and a face that conveys discernment in the same way, which is why this depiction stands out.

A clean-shaven merchant in a plain suit.

A youth in a sailor's uniform.

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