pointing out he beauty and "perfect elegance". He never once pointed out a flaw of…
Undoubtedly, Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth had all committed sin in one form or another, but Chillingworth’s sin lies on a much larger scale because while Hester and Dimmesdale repent for their sin Chillingworth fails to even recognize his own.…
Lurking guilt and shame, if not acknowledged and owned up to, can consume you. “‘I wonder he is not afraid to be alone with himself!’” (Hawthorne). The people that attended Reverend Hooper’s church were concerned, frightened, and intrigued about why he was suddenly wearing a black veil to cover his face. What was speculated about him not wanting to be alone with himself is true because he was getting caught up in his own guilt that he felt he needed to hide it from everyone in an attempt to hide it from himself. “At that instant, catching a glimpse of his figure in the looking-glass, the black veil involved his own spirit in the horror with which it overwhelmed all others” (Hawthorne). At the wedding, Reverend Hooper finally saw himself in the mirror and, for the first time, saw how caught up in his guilt and shame he was, and how by not owning…
The Shame “Shame is nothing more than denial of the truth.” – M. Funkhouser. Everyone agrees that…
Both influential writers in the time of early American literature, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Edgar Allen Poe explored the dark motives of the human psyche. In “The Minister’s Black Veil”, a short story by Hawthorne, the town’s minister, Mr. Hooper steps out into the street one day wearing a black veil that covers his face. His clergymen cannot bear to see him plainly profess his sins and instead separate themselves in an attempt to deny the truth that all people are flawed, but are eventually forced to accept it. In Poe’s short story, “The Masque of the Red Death”, Prince Prospero and his merrymakers lock themselves within a castellated abbey in an attempt to escape the horrible “Red Death” that ravages the lives of the…
The scarlet letter tells the story of sin, guilt and repentance. The scarlet letter was given to Hester and Dimmesdale to constantly remind them of their sins. Guilt ate away at characters, such as Dimmesdale, when trying to conceal his sins. Repentance was also felt by characters throughout The Scarlet Letter.…
“Guilt is through the spirit and Pain is the body.” Everyone is sinful or guilty in a way, whether it is lying or doing adultery. It is mistakes that are caused by people. Because you will have to be guilty first in order to suffer the pain that was caused by their sin. Mr. Dimmesdale in The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne had to suffer his own sin and can’t find a way to confess to the society, no one understands what is he going through. Hester has to suffer from her own sin with everyone be disgusted by her, wish to not have any relationship with her. This is the same with John Proctor in The Crucible by Arthur Miller. He had to suffer a sin of his own, due to the affair between him and Abigail Williams. Therefore he has to face…
Shame and guilt, as demonstrated above, are products of society, and the experience of these emotions is subject to the society that the individual was raised and/or currently resides in, as shown by the accounts of Puritan society. Likewise, these emotions and the experiences thereof are subject to where the individual exists within such societies, especially in regards to profession and gender, as shown by the narratives of The Scarlet Letter. Perhaps even morality, the base of emotions such as shame, is subjective to society, because it is, in the words of Paul Gilbert in his article on shame and guilt, this competency of social morals and emotions “that give rise to the human capacities for shame and guilt and make their forms so open to…
Those who have a spiritual background would argue that all sin is equal, and that no sin is greater than any other. However, others would argue that committing adultery is greater than gossiping, or telling a lie. The novel The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne emphasizes the difference in sins. Although each of the characters commits their own sin, each of them could be argued as the one with the greatest. Through Dimmesdale’s hypocrisy, deception, and adultery, his sin is the greatest.…
When analyzing the countless number of religions world wide one can't help but notice the recurrent belief in confession. Confession is defined as admitting or acknowledging some form of fault. Along with confession comes the freedom from one's guilt and anxiety. In “The Scarlet Letter” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Arthur Dimmesdale is a puritan minister who undergoes drastic changes physically and mentally because he would not confess to adultery. In this 17th century society, public acknowledgement of sin is necessary by law and religion. Due to Dimmesdale’s type of sin he finds it difficult to confess to the public; this may be because of his position as a minister and his fear of his communities consequences.…
How can a sin change a life? In the Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester’s sin of adultery is well known. Forced to stand in front of the community for one day to be publically shamed, Hester held her head high. However, her shame does not end there. Although people begin to get used to Hester in their community and even begin to accept her, Hester has changed. The constant humiliation has driven her to hide behind her embarrassment, and she is therefore distinguished by it. In the passage from the Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne uses vivid imagery and diction to convey the powerful effect a symbol can have.…
The disagreement starts with Hester trying to get William too allow their sons to go to the circus. She’s claiming that William has worked their sons all summer and hasn’t given them much in return. She’s wanting them to go because it would be something they would never forget, and she remembers the time she went, and how much she enjoyed it. This starts to open up William to the ideas of them going, by taking him back to a time when he snuck off to go to the circus, but it wasn’t just any circus he went to the same one Hester was talking about, but neither of them knew the other was there.…
Topic A: How are Hester, Dimmesdale, Pearl & Chillingworth redeemed by the end of the novel? (Or, how are they not?)…
The procession is a huge ordeal for the citizens of the Puritan town, passing through the busy marketplace “on its way towards the meeting house; where [...] the Reverend Mr. Dimmesdale was to deliver an Election Sermon” (194). The procession includes musicians that “played with no great skill” (194) but were still able to harmonize together, along with a body of soldiery that “still sustains a corporate existence, and marches down from past ages with an ancient and honorable fame” (194). Enormous effort was put into the procession in order to make it as presentable and sophisticated as possible for such an important occasion. On this day, the people along with Hester noticed the great improvement in the minister’s appearance; he looks healthier…
Thirty six year old and mother of two, Martha Hester, lurches violently forward with another gag reflex kicking in as she retches into the what-was white toilet bowl.…