In "The Scarlet Letter", Nathaniel Hawthrone, historical fiction, uses the tones frailty and sorrow to demonstrate the new comers in the 1850s and they're stubborn to new ideas. Experiencing a new world gave them a new beginning with an opportunity to establish themselves, but their religion played a great part when it came to new ideas. He describes the door with flimsy material that highlights the fragileness but conquers the disappointment by explaining the beauty of the rosebush growing aside it.
Nathaniel Hawthrone's diction enhance the poor and dreariness behind the door as a respond to at first weakness on their society, then anguishes delivered for disapproval to change. "invariably recognized," hard life "ponderous iron-work" to have