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Grace Hodges Mrs. Drew English 10 H 4 November 2016 Women Stand Strong Where Men Fail Add a grabber sentence here. In the classic novel, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the characters Hester Prynne, Rev. Arthur Dimmesdale and Roger Chillingworth are all linked together by one act of sin, and all experience shame and guilt about it. Each embarks on a separate journey to rediscover the purpose in his or her life. For Mr. Prynne, the shame of having an adulterous wife is too much to bear. He reinvents himself into Roger Chillingworth and becomes consumed in exacting revenge on Hester’s partner. Rev. Dimmesdale buries his guilt of his actions deep inside himself and starts to deteriorate from the stress.
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He is a sincere believer, so when he commits the sin, he crumbles. His self torture had trapped him more inside of himself and his guilt instead of freeing him. Like Chillingworth, he cannot overcome his shame, guilt and pain. This leads him to find his purpose in self harm and to spend the last seven years inconstant state of guilt and shame. Dimmesdale succumbs to guilt, confessing his sin to New England. After the confession, he dies of exhaustion and self punishment. But like Chillingworth, Dimmesdale will not let go of his internal shame and guilt from the sin. He holds tightly to it and punishes himself, damaging his mental and physical health, and leading to his death. Add a concluding your sentence here to tie it all back to the thesis. How does it prove that his role as a man led to him self-destructing? After her act of sin is discovered by the townspeople, Hester Prynne is publicly shamed on a scaffold and exiled to outskirts of town. But instead of getting caught in the shame, grief and guilt like the male characters do, Hester begins the journey to rediscover a positive purpose in her life. Hester supports herself and her daughter, Pearl, by making productions of her handiwork for the townspeople, especially people who …show more content…
Hester works hard in the community for seven years and becomes known for her charitable deeds. In addition to helping the less fortunate, she offers comfort to the poor, the sick, and the downtrodden. Hester was willing to drop everything and come to someone’s bedside. Hawthorne remarks that there were “none so ready as she to give of her little substance to every demand of poverty ... none so self-devoted as Hester”(176-177). No matter what personal trouble or sickness that spread through the town, Hester would come household that was marked by trouble, as if its was her job. When she visited, her scarlet A seemed to radiate a warm light, signaling hope. In these emergencies, Hester’s nature showed itself to be warm and rich; “a well-spring” of human tenderness, unfailing to every real demand, and inexhaustible by the largest (176). Hester also reverses townspeople’s views of the scarlet letter from ‘Adultery’ to ‘Able’. “Such helpfulness was found in her, — so much power to do, and power to sympathize, — that many people refused to interpret the scarlet A by its original signification. They said that it meant Able; so strong was Hester Prynne, with a woman’s strength” (177). At the end of the novel, Hester lives
Later in The Scarlet Letter, Dimmesdale digs himself into a dark hole of shame and failure. At this point in the book Dimmesdale’s guilt has built up to an extreme amount he inflicts torment
He suffers from extreme guilt because of the sin he committed with Hester. His place in society prevents him from confessing; he keeps the sin a secret. He distances himself from everyone only so that he would not feel the pressure into confessing, this leads to him being emotionally isolated. When Roger Chillingworth talks to Dimmesdale about his troubles, Dimmesdale feels as if he is being drawn close to a confession and leaves the scene out of fright. He says, “But who art thou, that meddlest in this matter?—that dares thrust himself between the sufferer and his God?” (113). Dimmesdale is afraid that Chillingworth is going to discover his sin and thus decides to leave. Although Dimmesdale succeeds in hiding his sin from Chillingworth, he still feels the need to end his priestly duties because he is not the man everyone thinks he is. “‘I have laughed, in bitterness and agony of heart, at the contrast between what I seem and what I am! And Satan laughs at it!’” (159). All the townspeople revere Dimmesdale and act upon his every word, this makes Dimmesdale realize that revealing his sin will not only destroy his image. He continues to hide it and his feelings from the entire town, leaving him deserted with his emotions. His isolation leads to pangs of pain that only he understands. He reaches for his heart because he felt a pain that no one else knew of. His
Over time the people begin to see her as one who can bring them comfort when they are in distress. People even refuse to see her as one who has sinned but as one who represents the strength of women. As a result of all she has done people begin to be unable to discern the difference between Hester wearing the scarlet letter to that of a nun who wears a cross (Hawthorne 153). Hester’s identity has changed from “adulterer” to “able”. People no longer see her as much as a symbol of sin but of charity, as she has continuously shown her generosity with others, “In such emergencies, Hester’s nature showed itself warm and rich; a well - spring of human tenderness, unfailing to every real demand, and inexhaustible by the largest” (Hawthorne 152). Due to her actions Hester begins to change her identity from one of infamy to one who represents charity.
As another form of atonement, Prynne still manages to do charity work like feeding and sewing clothes for the poor. She does this even when they are cruel to her, “Hester bestowed superfluous means in charity, on wretches less miserable than herself” shows how much she would undertake to make amends for the sin (77). Hester redeems herself by undergoing the cruel bitterness from the dreadful people of the Boston society, and by responding to the bitterness with pure virtue. Hester Prynne atones for the infidelity in which she commits by enduring the hatred of the parochial community, and bears a badge of shame upon her chest which causes her to redeem herself to becoming a valuable human being.
Another effect on Dimmesdale, seen as his guilt slowly wears him down, is how he compares his actions to those of Roger Chillingworth. This is clearly seen when Dimmesdale claims to Hester, "We are not, Hester, the worst sinners in the world. There is one worse than even the polluted priest! That old man 's revenge has been blacker than my sin. He has violated, in cold blood, the sanctity of a human heart. Thou and I, Hester, never did so!” (Hawthorne 185). Even in the privacy of the forest, he did not want to accept the full reality of his actions. This is a step forward for him, however, because he chooses to actually say aloud that what he did was wrong, just not as wrong as Chillingworth’s terrorizing of him. Eventually, Dimmesdale is able to confess to the public his sin, and this is due to his longing to escape the torture Chillingworth has been putting him through. Dimmesdale is no longer affected by the guilt that his actions brought about, so Chillingworth has no reason to aggravate him anymore. Sadly for the reverend, the shame
Arthur Dimmesdale, a character of high reputation, overwhelmed by guilt, torn apart by his own wrongdoing, makes his entrance into history as the tragic hero whose life becomes a montage of pain and agony because of his mistakes. The themes leading to Dimmesdale’s becoming a tragic hero are his guilt from his sin, and his reluctance to tarnish his reputation in the town. Guilt plays a huge role in defining Dimmesdale as a tragic hero. Dimmesdale has understood that by not revealing his sin, he has doomed himself. This also connects with the constant struggle with Chillingworth. The mysteries of Dimmesdale’s guilty heart entice Chillingworth to delve into his soul and reveal what has been hidden, causing Dimmesdale great pain and
Chillingworth chooses to not forgive Dimmesdale but instead to seek revenge on him in evil ways, “He could play upon him as he chose. Would he arose him with a throb of agony?” (Pg.134) Hatred fills him and he is fueled by Dimmesdale's suffering. After Dimmesdale dies, Chillingworth withers away a year later. He had nothing more to live for.
Moreover, Dimmesdale`s suffering reflect on the outside when he was sick of not confessing his truth. For example, of this is that in the book the another has shown us that Dimmesdale suffering is reflecting him on the outside that why in the chapters Dimmesdale keeps on holding on his heart on where the letter “A” is carve on this chest. Another is that when Dimmesdale was leading the church to tell the town folks about how God will be like if you did not follow in the correct way he will sin you that why Dimmesdale did not what to tell everybody about it if he did he could get killed and thought out as a minister in the church and also the townsfolks always believe that Dimmesdale is the only one that can connect to God and he cannot do
”Better had this man had died at once! Never did mortal suffer what this an has suffered. And all, all, in the sight of his worst enemy!” - Chillingworth (p. 164, 2nd para.) Through his torture we can see the guilt upon guilt which Dimmesdale has taken upon himself.
Dimmesdale lived the past seven years in misery. He suffers from his own guilt, and this guilt is gradually destroying him mentally and physically. His depression is being shown through a simile, “Without any effort of his will...to restrain himself, he shrieked aloud; an outcry that went pealing through the night...as if a company of devils, detecting so much misery and terror in it...were bandying it to and fro” (Hawthorne 114). He cries out loud as his sound echoes through the night sky; this shows a very deeply hurt and emotional man, because he has to scream to let all the pain that he had kept to himself these past years. Guilt has been slowly destroying him causing him to also decline in health.
His guilt changed his demeanor and the way he carries himself day to day, he was always “feeble and pale” (224), he couldn’t handle having two completely different identities. Even after giving himself a physical reminder on his chest, his mind still could not overcome the guilt and the lie he carries inside himself everyday. Every single day Dimmesdale walks with, “a great horror of mind” (134), for what he did not only himself, but to others, mostly Pearl and Hester. It made it even harder being the head of the Puritan church, because everyone looks up to him as angel God has sent to save the Puritan community from sin. Consequently, he commits one of the worst crimes a Puritan can commit, adultery, and he knows that the punishment for this is execution.
They said that it meant Abel; so strong was Hester Prynne, with a woman’s strength." Her change transforms her to a new person. It changes her so much, Pearl, couldn’t even recognize her.
Dimmesdale is constantly torn at by guilt. His affair with Hester has left him a broken man. He resorts to self-mutilation as a form of punishment, too afraid to publically confess. His guilt destroys him, and he becomes physically broken, as his sin begins to manifest itself more and more. He has to decide whether he should confess his sin, and begin to actually repent, or keep it hidden, protecting his mortal life and public image. Chillingworth does his best to dissuade him from the former, knowing
This concealed sin is the center of his tormented conscience. The pressures on him from society are greater than those on Hester because he is a man in high standing, expected to represent the epitome of the Puritanical ideals. It is ironic that Dimmesdale, who is supposed to be absolutely pure and urges congregation to confess and openly repent their sins, is incapable of doing so himself. He knows the hypocrisy of his actions but cannot bring himself to admit his deed publicly. In resentment of this he punishes himself physically - he is "often observed to put his hand over his heart, with indicative of pain" (ch 9). Dimmesdale's resistance to be true to himself gradually destroys his well being as well as Hester's, and although he eventually declares the truth, his resistance ends him.
The guilt that plagues Arthur Dimmesdale, leads to the climax of the novel, in which Dimmesdale overcomes his inner conflict. Throughout the entire book, Dimmesdale has struggled with trying to reveal what he has done. At first he is to cowardly to do this, but eventually Dimmesdale realizes the only way to redeem himself is to confess his sins and repent. Knowing it is the only way to redemption, Dimmesdale goes before the whole town, with Hester and Pearl, and reveals his sin to the people. Dimmesdale’s