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Arthur Dimmesdale In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

Decent Essays

The most important aspect in the life of Arthur Dimmesdale’s character is his role in the Puritan community, a society in which religion dominates. As Puritan minister, Dimmesdale is expected to set an exemplary precedent of the Puritan faith daily. Even considering that the public is completely clueless to the fact that he is on the other side of Hester Prynne’s crime of adultery, maintaining his high reputation is much harder than Dimmesdale thought at first, for he was immediately struck by extreme guilt, turning this case of adultery into an internal struggle for his reputation while keeping his sin hidden. Dimmesdale’s ironic mistake changes his entire life upside down. Having lost his perspective on life because of his sin of adultery, …show more content…

It does not help that part Chillingworth’s revenge is to increase his mental suffering by getting into Dimmesdale’s head by tormenting him into hearing what he already knows-- guilt from sin is the reason for his sickness. This literally complies him to go mad. As Dimmesdale forbids himself to sleep, starves himself, whips himself, and imposes other forms of abuse, nothing comes close to making him feel better. At this time of his mental illness, Dimmesdale has truly lost all perspective to the point where he experiences self-torment in the form of hallucinations and delusions. The narrator explains, “In these lengthened vigils, his brain often reeled, and visions seemed to flit before him”(Hawthorne 172). In conclusion, having lost his perspective on life because of his sin of adultery, Arthur Dimmesdale, in The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, suffers physical, spiritual, and mental agony. The sin of adultery affects Dimmesdale is such a way that the guilt of committing it is the reason as to why he suffers this agony. Knowing that he cannot get the best of both worlds, he is torn between the two different ways of looking at his consequences; either confessing his sin to the public and freeing himself from this guilt, or confessing his sin to the public and losing entire his

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