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Hester Prynne’s sin in the Scarlet Letter, was adultery. She committed adultery with Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale. This sin in particular was one of the more frowned upon of the Puritan faith. In result of this sin, she became pregnant and gave birth to Pearl, who becomes the highlight of Hester’s life. Dimmesdale’s sin as recently explained was adultery as well. He as the priest was looked upon as the most honorable man in the community and was supposed to be considered sinless.…
In addition, Dimmesdale’s faces many obstacles and challenges that killed him and eat him in the inside. For example, of a challenge that he faces is not confessing to Hester Prynne up front to the townsfolks that he was Hester partner in the affairs. Another example is that when Hester walk up on stage and confess that she was responsible for the adultery and while she was talking she seen Chillingworth looking at her and places his finger on his lips to tell Hester to not tell everybody in town where is he. In fact, Dimmesdale was her partner in an affairs but he really did not what to confess to the town that he was Hester partner in affair if he did everybody will question the minister for being sin so over the time he started to have physiognomy…
How can one be assigned the title of suffering the most? This is a complicated question presented in the book, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The Scarlet Letter is a book that revolves around a sinner named Hester Prynne, a minister, Arthur Dimmesdale, a physician, Roger Chillingworth, and a little girl named Pearl. Hester and Dimmesdale are both who has committed adultery; however, the story starts with Hester being a woman who is branded with a Scarlet Letter A, that represents adulterous, while Dimmesdale is not shown to be the person who Hester had an affair with. Throughout the story, Hester, Dimmesdale, Pearl, and Chillingworth are all in the midst of a troubling situation, while…
Arthur’s view on the situation is he also had committed adultery. Arthur Dimmesdale’s sin had a big impact on him because his guilt was eating him alive. This sin cause him much suffering and pain, physically and mentally. I would sometimes whip myself because I knew my wrong doings, Dimmesdale explained. One night I had home out to the scaffold and had just stood there screaming. I then see Hester and Pearl and they join he on the scaffold. Pearl then asks me, “Are you going to stand here with us tomorrow?” No, I…
The section in which Dimmesdale stood on the scaffold with Hester and Pearl impressed me the most. He conquered his fear and pride, and, as clearly as he could, confessed his crime. He recognized that though he had done an immense amount of penance, of good works, they could not atone for his sin. Only to “show himself to mankind as they would see him at the judgment-seat” would be the true act of penitence.…
Arthur Dimmesdale was a key component in The Scarlet Letter, he committed the sin of adultery with Hester Prynne. Dimmesdale went through drastic physical and mental changes throughout the course of the novel. Between Roger Chillingworth torturing him in his home, and having to deny his daughter, Pearl, the recognition she deserves, Dimmesdale’s wellbeing has been damaged. Throughout the story Hawthorne shows Dimmesdale’s feelings of pain and sorrow through not being able to confess his sins. Consequently, Dimmesdale has a problem.…
One of the main considerations while reading The Scarlet Letter, is who seems to be the guiltiest character. The three prime targets are Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth. While all of them have questionable morality and have committed "sin", Dimmesdale, the puritan minister, is the guiltiest character. He initiates a physical relationship with Hester, knowing she is married, he fails at the fatherly responsibility of taking care of his daughter, Pearl, and he selfishly cares more about himself than his secret family.…
In The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne portrayed a perverse yet conscience-stricken romance between Hester Prynne, Reverend Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingworth in which created the outcome of the Liaison, Pearl. Hester was shunned and punished due to the opinions of adultery, in which was looked down upon in the 1800’s. Hester committed the crime due to her falling in love with another man, Rev. Dimmesdale and caused her to wear a letter of an “A” as punishment since her husband had randomly abandoned her for “Medical School” without any sign or message of his disappearance. If adultery is committed, then the adulterer must confirm their partner that had…
In The Scarlet letter, Dimmesdale was blaming himself and feeling guilty in keeping his secret and making Hester take all the blame for both their sins.…
In The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, there is multiple uses of symbolism for guilt using details such as Dimmesdale, the leech reference, and the scaffold scenes. By adding all of these important text findings, one can conclude that there is deeper guilt than seen on the surface, and that it’s important for us to admit our guilt as we find it within ourselves, or suffer with a heavy heart until it consumes…
“When you point a finger at someone else, then three fingers point back at you” (My Second Grade Teacher). In the Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne jeers at the absurd Puritan era and crime and punishment. But the renowned author touches on a more personal theme, an issue that everyone has come across: self evaluation. Even though Hester Prynne, a honest adulterer, and Arthur Dimmesdale, a untruthful priest, are first to sin it is still viewed that Robert Chillingworth, an abandoned husband seeking revenge, has “violated the sanctity of human heart” (Hawthorne 234). To compare the sin that was brought on by choice and sin initiated by another should not be evaluated.There is no argument that Chillingworth’s revenge on Dimmesdale is evil, he plotted against Dimmesdale soon as he confirmed he was Hester’s lover. But the aggravators of sin, Hester and Dimmesdale, must be held responsible for the effects of their actions. Unlike Hester, Dimmesdale refuses to confess to having premarital sex. Adulturing is sinful but the lies, acting, and observing others take the full…
When I first met Tom in 6th grade I saw him as a sweet, kind boy. He was loved and revered by all his peers for his intelligence and unwavering kindness. However, through the years Tom tried so hard to please everyone around him -- his teachers, his parents and his friends -- that he became fake and self-absorbed. Tom had told me that he felt terrible pretending to be someone he’s not, but he’s afraid of what those around him would think if he were his true self. Even though Tom is a young man, he shares similar traits with Arthur Dimmesdale in The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Dimmesdale attempted to be the venerable saint everyone in the town wanted him to be, despite harbouring a dark secret that haunted him for seven years. He…
In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne utilizes Puritan ideology to convey a philosophical reflection on sin and redemption. Adulteress Hester Prynne must wear a scarlet A to mark her shame, and while her lover, Arthur Dimmesdale, remains unidentified and is wracked with guilt, her husband, Roger Chillingworth, seeks revenge. Although all three characters contemplate redemption, it is only Hester that chooses to confront her sin; Dimmesdale and Chillingworth refuse. This decision is heavily influenced by their respective morals. Hester’s morals of truth, forgiveness, and honesty allow her to be almost fully redeemed in the eyes of the public, whereas Dimmesdale's perverse loyalty to the morally corrupt society that hinders his love for…
The downfall of an individual can grow from the societal influences of society’s compulsion to conform. In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne and reverend Arthur Dimmesdale endeavor to assimilate to the expectations of a puritan society. Throughout the novel, Prynne and Dimmesdale fight to make amends for their sin of adultery, and as the town glares a spiteful eye at Prynne, Dimmesdale hides away, still loved by all. Prynne makes a conscious decision to embrace her quarantine from the community’s shunning. However, Dimmesdale faces an internal battle of shame and guilt while concealing his immorality. Prynne and Dimmesdale suffer the fate of alienation, however, Prynne accepts isolation, becoming steadfast, while Dimmesdale…