“Preceded by the beadle, and attended by an irregular procession of stern-browed men and unkindly-visaged women, Hester Prynne set forth towards the place appointed for her punishment.” (Chapter 2, The Market-Place) The action of Hester standing on the scaffold and having the ability to confess relates to how punished politicians have the ability to say something that won’t change the people’s mind, but to get off his/her chest before potential death/ punishment. “On ordinary days, we each walk alone,” (Wanderlust: A History of Walking) The idea of walking alone is represented throughout the novel with Hester walking alone to the scaffold in Chapter 2, The Market-Place and repeated when she was taking care of Pearl alone in a distant area from the community in Chapter 5, Hester At Her Needle. In addition this idea applies to Dimmesdale refuses to have Chillingworth give him medicine and DImmesdale suffers from guilt, which is the product of an internalized self-disapproval by himself in Chapter 10, The Leech And His…
The scaffold is a huge symbol in “The Scarlet Letter” the scaffold is seen three times in the book and each time the four main characters can be seen. The scaffold represents a place where public humiliation takes place ,this is a place where pence or punishment for sins happens. It also happens to be the place where Hawthorne shows the growth of each character. During each of the scaffold senses these four characters can be seen.At the beginning of the book we see Hester standing with Pearl with Dimmesdale above her asking, more like demanding answers and Chillingworth in the audience. Hester is full of shame for what she has done an example is she attempts to hide the letter with pearl,but she cannot hide one object of shame with another.…
The next type of punishment for Hester is the scaffold displayed publicly in front of everybody so that they may see her. Whenever Hester was given her daily freedom from the prison, it seems like she would wind up at the scaffold. The scaffold is always being used and occupied by Hester and even Dimmesdale himself. There are three scenes in which the scaffold is being used by Hester and Dimmesdale, two of them coming in the…
The scaffold was the only place where Dimmesdale could go to and apologize for his sin, guilt and escape his persecutor's commands. Dimmesdale committed a sin that was frowned upon by god but convinced himself that not confessing his sin was protecting the townspeople. Hester had countless opportunities to name her fellow sinner but she choose not to.…
In the second scaffold scene stronger feeling of guilt is present. Reverend Dimmesdale has committed adultery and he is no longer able to bare it. Dimmesdale “under the influence of somnambulism” climbs the scaffold in the “dark gray of midnight” (101). He does not want to be seen just as he did not want his sin to be seen. This is shame on a more personal level than Hester experienced. Dimmesdale is able to laugh and be joined by his daughter, Hester and his unwanted witness Chillingsworth. Dimmesdale’s darkness is no longer as dark as he wanted it to…
The scaffold's introductory scene occurs right as the novel commences at which point it symbolizes disgrace, public humiliation, and judgment for Hester and her daughter Pearl. They are obligated to ascend the scaffold while the communities' society ridicule and mortify them, this as a repercussion of Hester's adultery for which Pearl was the product. This is demonstrated when the grim beadle states, “Open a passage; and, I promise ye, Mistress Prynne shall be set where man, woman, and child may have a fair sight of her brave apparel.... A blessing on the righteous Colony of the Massachusetts, where iniquity is dragged out into the sunshine!” (p. 46-47). While standing on the scaffold, Hester's emotions compare to those of loneliness and embarrassment…
In the first scaffold scene, Hester is holding her daughter Pearl in her arms. Hester has committed adultery and must stand on the scaffold for three hours to endure her punishment. She is placed with the scarlet letter “A” on her bosom so that people of the Puritan community know what she has done. Hester tries to hide the letter “A” by moving Pearl to cover it up, but decides to suffer trying to keep her dignity. The townspeople mock Hester, and she is scrutinized for the sin she has committed. While Hester and Pearl are on the scaffold, Arthur Dimmesdale and the other leaders of the community are watching from the side. Hester sees her husband Chillingsworth in the crowd, and as he realizes this, he puts his finger over his lips to tell Hester not to reveal who he is.…
Hester is faced with several different punishments. While she is standing on the scaffold she becomes aware of the…
In the first scaffold scene, as Dimmesdale try’s to persuade Hester to reveal the identity of her fellow sinner, he also at the same time convinces the townspeople that he surely is not the one who committed the sin with her by not revealing that he was in fact the man responsible. By publicly stating to Hester that she should not protect the man’s identity out of pity or tenderness, Dimmesdale is using logos to convince his audience that there is no way he could be her lover, why would he want her to reveal him as her lover? Furthermore when Hester refuses to reveal the identity of her lover, Dimmesdale doesn’t question her any further, causing the crowd to use logical reasoning in assuming that he can not be the lover of Hester. Although Reverend Dimmesdale does not convince Hester to reveal…
At the second scaffold scene, Dimmesdale, who is still maintaining his position as Hester Prynne’s accuser and a hypocrite, finds himself suffering with the struggle of his perfect reputation battling his guilt for the crime he committed. During the middle of the night, while the townspeople are all asleep, Dimmesdale makes his way to the scaffold, holding a silent vigil. At the scaffold, he cries out in physical and mental pain. Hester and Pearl hear his crying as they are on their way home and go to him. There, at Dimmesdale’s request, they join him on the scaffold where they stand in the darkness, holding each other. Pearl then…
Before he stands in front of the town with his family, they stand under the night sky on the scaffold with a red ‘A’ in the stars to illuminate the fact that they’re all together in guilty sin, as stated by Hawthorne, “... now long since, Hester Prynne had lived her first hours of public ignominy.” (Hawthorne, 143). This quote is setting up how Dimmesdale knows that this is where Hester was first punished for their sins. To the end of the book, Hawthorne then ties the scaffold to a release of guilt, saying “They beheld the minister, leaning on Hester’s shoulder and supported by her arm around him, approached the scaffold and ascended its steps; while still the little hand of the sin-born child was clasped in his.” (Hawthorne, 248). This is the beginning of the admittance of guilt and sin to the town.…
Early in the novel, when Hester was shamed upon the scaffolding, "that the Reverend Master Dimmesdale, her godly pastor, [took] it very grievously to heart that such a scandal should have came upon his congregation" (Hawthorne 38). Instead of being upon the scaffolding with his lover, Dimmesdale allows his cowardliness to let Hester to take publicity for the sin, while he is portrayed to be shocked that such actions could have taken place in his…
The audience is prepared for this scene by Hawthorne’s focusing on Hester’s scarlet letter which has become a familiar sight in the town. After his Election Day sermon, Arthur Dimmesdale is seen climbing onto the platform and asks Hester and Pearl to join him. Hester’s strength is necessary for the purpose he has in mind. Chillingworth is also present in the crowd, as he has been on the earlier two occasions. He tries to prevent the minister from mounting the scaffold. In the first scaffold scene, he wanted to know the name of Hester’s fellow-sinner. In the second scene, the suspicion about his identity turned into fact. Chillingworth whispers, “Do not perish in dishonor, I can yet save you.” But Dimmesdale brushes him aside and mounts the scaffold. He has decided that he shall be the one to tell everyone what he has done. He tells Hester that he is doing God’s will. He rips apart the front of his vestment, and reveals his sins to the world. The reader is left in the dark about what is shown, but it can be assumed it is the mark of his sins. Suddenly, his soul can't take it anymore, and he dies. but not before proclaiming that "His will be done!". By revealing his sins to the people, he is finally let go, both from mental anguish and in…
Hester endures disgrace and public humiliation in the scaffold as a form of punishment for her sins. The scaffold represents guilt for Dimmesdale due to regrets in regards to not confessing his sins. Furthermore, it also represents freedom for Dimmesdale at another occasion in the novel, he stands in the scaffold in his final moments and feels liberated and free with his final revelation. Although rumored that Hawthorne found a letter 'A' while locked away in his mother's attic, I could only assume he would of never thought about the story behind it, a woman disgraced, and a man guilty, freed and then dead.…
However, this is not true. Hawthorne writes, “The moment that he did so, there came what seemed a tumultuous rush of new life, other life than his own, pouring like a torrent into his heart, and hurrying through all his veins…The three formed an electric chain.” (page 105) The reader learns from this quote that Dimmesdale and Hester still have a great love for each other. It is also from this quote that the “A” on Hester has not worked as well as it was intended. Hester still has a great love for the man with whom she had an affair and this may never change. Furthermore, her banishment has given her time to focus on her love for Dimmesdale. Here the scaffold represents Hester’s unwillingness to not love…