Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Scarlet Letter And Dimmesdale Essays - English-language Films
  Scarlet Letter And Dimmesdale    In the book The Scarlet Letter, the character Reverend Dimmesdale, a very  religious man, committed adultery, which was a sin in the Puritan community. Of  course, this sin could not be committed alone. His partner was Hester Prynne.    Hester was caught with the sinning only because she had had a child named Pearl.    Dimmesdale was broken down by Roger Chillinsworth, Hester Prynne's real  husband, and by his own self-guilt. Dimmesdale would later confess his sin and  die on the scaffold. Dimmesdale was well known by the community and was looked  up to by many religious people. But underneath his religious mask he is actually  the worst sinner of them all. His sin was one of the greatest sins in a Puritan  community. The sin would eat him alive from the inside out causing him to become  weaker and weaker, until he cannot stand it anymore. In a last show of strength  he announces his sin to the world, but dies soon afterwards. In the beginning    Dimmesdale is a weak, reserved man. Because of his sin his health regresses more  and more as the book goes on, yet he tries to hide his sin beneath a religious  mask. By the end of the book he comes forth and tells the truth, but because he  had hidden the sin for so long he is unable to survive. Dimmesdale also adds  suspense to the novel to keep the reader more interested in what Reverend    Dimmesdale is hiding and his hidden secrets. Therefore Dimmesdale's sin is the  key focus of the book to keep the reader interested. Dimmesdale tries to cover  up his sin by preaching to the town and becoming more committed to his  preachings, but this only makes him feel even guiltier. In the beginning of the  story, Dimmesdale is described by these words; "His eloquence and religious  fervor had already given earnest of high eminence in his  profession."(Hawthorne,44). This proves that the people of the town looked up  to him because of the fact that he acted very religious and he was the last  person that anyone expected to sin. This is the reason that it was so hard for  him to come out and tell the people the truth. Dimmesdale often tried to tell  the people in a roundabout way when he said "...though he (Dimmesdale) were to  step down from a high place, and stand there beside thee on thy pedestal of  shame, yet better were it so, that to hide a guilty heart through  life."(Hawthorne,65). Dimmesdale obviously is trying to tell her that he does  not want to hide with this guilt and that he will feel it and have temptations  later but also that he is going to go through life with the sin. Dimmesdale is  obviously hiding behind his religious mask and is afraid to come out and tell  his secret. This secret tears him apart and eventually is the cause of his  death. Reverend Dimmesdale was torn apart by his sin. It would make him do and  think evil things. The sin even made him resort to flagellation in order to make  the pain of the guilt go away. This self-prescribed torture Dimmesdale  eventually lead to his death on the scaffold where he did as he promised Pearl;  holding her and her mothers hand in front of the entire community. His torture  included him pushing himself to become a better minister to help keep the  guiltiness pushed back inside his head. He began working extremely to ensure  that where his work would make the community think of him as an even more holy  man who had done no wrong. In turn making his guilt rise up even more and then  making himself have to push on and try to hide his guilt. Dimmesdale even puts  himself through self-beatings. Where once he was a attractive man was now  considered a pale, weak, emaciated coward who could barely walk and would have  great pains, in which he would grab his chest. His torture brought him to his  death where he died upon the very scaffold that Hester, his fellow sinner, had  stood to face her punishment. Dimmesdale, throughout the book, knows of where he  is and what he is doing. He is seen in the book as a reverend and to the reader  as a man who is quite well-known in the community, but is obviously hiding  something. This keeps the reader interested in the book, Dimmesdale's  regression and why he regresses to his deathly state. What he    
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