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Shadows In The Scarlet Letter

Decent Essays

In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, the author delves deep into the psychology of characters in anguish because of a moment the reader never sees. Set in a spiritual Puritan colony, the inner turmoil of right and wrong and truth and deception shape the characters’ very being. In exploring their tumultuous spirits, an emphasis is cast upon a certain mysterious natural phenomena: shadows. The text explores how the metaphorical shadows in one’s heart can shape their personality and dispositions. This motif in The Scarlet Letter displays how living in the world of shadows can make one a shadow themselves. Initially, part of the appeal is being “one with the shadows” is to more accurately see others and their shadows. For example, …show more content…

While Dimmesdale is convincing the town leaders to let Hester keep Pearl (and his connection to her is still unknown to the unobservant reader), “the shadow of his figure…[is] tremulous with the vehemence of his appeal.” When Dimmesdale’s true emotions towards Hester and Pearl come out in his argument, his dark connection with her, born of their past sin, quakes in fear at the slightest hint of its existence. The personification of the shadow gives it a seemingly separate life and consciousness form that of Dimmesdale's, suggesting that Dimmesdale has separated himself so wholly that his light side has little to no control over the shadow. This shadowy life’s sole purpose and drive is to remain undiscovered, and it shows the will to violently fight against exposure. Dimmesdale has a deep desire to reveal his secret, “long[ing] to speak out from his own pulpit… ‘I am utterly a pollution and a lie,’” but is held back by his fear and pain. Though hiding his shadow “tortured him,” his attempts to reveal his secret were thwarted by the ever-present personified shadow sealing his lips. As his toxic alternate personality grows stronger and consumes more of him as time passes, its increasing strength creates a self-perpetuating cycle that keeps its existence hidden. Furthermore, when Dimmesdale takes his “vigil” at the pillory, he is “walking in the shadow...perhaps …show more content…

First, it makes one paranoid and uncomfortable whenever in public because of the constant fear of discovery. In Dimmesdale’s introduction, Hawthorne describes him as having a consistently “half-frightened look,” and that he “could only be at ease in some seclusion of his own”(62). Even before the reader is made aware of Dimmesdale’s past sins, his demeanor in public displays his underlying anguish. Whenever he is in public, he is plagued by fears that the sunlight will expose him. Therefore, he, “as far as his duties would permit, trod in the shadowy by-paths” (62). Because of the constant fear and discomfort that comes from his shadow, he feels the need to ostracize himself. The shadow of his personality squirms under the scrutiny of the public eye, making him miserable unless alone. Its intense desire to remain hidden leads Dimmsdale to feel as if he is “quite astray, and at a loss in the pathway of human existence”(62). Living with (and as a result, in) a shadow leaves Dimmesdale completely lost and makes him feel separate from humanity. This darkness of character is taken to its extreme with Roger Chillingworth who has “a circle of ominous shadow moving along with his deformity.” Roger’s entire purpose and character in the colony is a secret, and, as a result, he is totally consumed by his shadow until it completely envelops him. Both Chillingworth and Dimmesdale, because they are

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