In June 1642, in the Puritan town of Boston, people surround Hester, a woman who is suspected of adultery. She is required to wear an A on her dress to make her feel terrible for what she has done. Hester is told to tell the name of the father of the child Hester has. When Hester looks over the crowd she notices a man, it was her long lost husband, believed to be lost at sea. At first the husband didn’t understand why she was being punished, so he asked someone, they told him about the adultery, so he furiously decides that the man should be punished along with her. After she returns to her prison cell, Roger Chillingworth, a physician, is brought in to calm Hester and her child; however, it is her long lost husband, but he changed his name. …show more content…
Tormented by his guilty conscience, Dimmesdale goes to the square where Hester was punished years earlier. Climbing the scaffold, he admits his guilt to them but cannot find the courage to do so publicly. Hester, shocked by Dimmesdale, decides to obtain a release from her promise of silence to her husband. Several days later, Hester meets Dimmesdale in the forest and tells him of her husband and his desire for revenge. She convinces Dimmesdale to leave Boston in secret on a ship to Europe, where they can start a new life. On Election Day, Dimmesdale gives what is declared to be one of his most inspired sermons. But as the procession leaves the church, Dimmesdale climbs upon the scaffold and confesses his sin, dying in Hester's arms. Later, most witnesses swear that they saw a stigma in the form of a scarlet A upon his chest, although some deny it. Chillingworth, losing his will for revenge, dies shortly after and leaves Pearl an inheritance. After, Hester returns to her cottage and resumes wearing the scarlet letter. When she dies, she is buried near the grave of Dimmesdale, and they share a simple slate tombstone engraved with words saying: "On a field, sable, the letter A,
In the novel, “The Scarlet Letter”, a woman named Hester Prynne commits a sin. She commits the sin of adultery which results in the birth of her daughter Pearl. Hester now has to wear a scarlet letter on her chest for the rest of her life. Unbeknownst to everyone else except Hester, Dimmesdale, is the father of Pearl. Hester’s husband, Roger Chillingworth, now seeks revenge for what Hester has done to him. He learns that Dimmesdale is the father but tells no one because he wants to have something over Dimmesdale. Dimmesdale reveals his sin to the public of Boston and dies. Pearl and Hester leave to make a life for themselves.
By keeping his “scarlet letter” hidden, the reader can infer that Dimmesdale is guilty and struggling to reveal his sin. Later on when Dimmesdale was standing on the scaffold with Hester and Pearl at night he sees “the appearance of an immense letter – the letter “A” – marked out in lines of dull red light” (140). His excessive pride causes him to think that God has shown this image of the letter “A” just for him. He thinks the letter stands for the sin he has committed, adultery, whereas the rest of the town believes it stands
People, especially Reverend Dimmesdale were especially mean towards Hester, but later in the story, Dimmesdale is outed as Hester’s lover and an adulterer himself. During the conclusion of the story, Dimmesdale’s health begins to fail, and Hester’s old husband, Mr. Chillingworth, suspects that the illness resulted from a sort of internal guilt Dimmesdale had never expressed to anyone. Eventually, Dimmesdale owns up to his guilt and joins Hester and their daughter, Pearl, in the scaffold where Hester was first punished at the very beginning of the story, and admits that he and Hester fornicated and that Pearl was actually his daughter. In the text it says, “God’s eye beheld it! The angels were forever pointing at it1 The devil knew it well, and fretted it continually with the touch of his burning finger! But he hid it cunningly from men, and walked among you with the mien of a spirit, mournful, because so pure in a sinful world!” (pg. 242 l. 2-6), meaning that he and God knew everything that was going on, and it was burning him up inside. In the end, Dimmesdale dies shortly after his confession, and by the time Hester dies, both are buried next to
dealing with the guilt, he causes himself not to sleep or eat. Dimmesdale is described as, “pitiably weak; no evidence at once so slight and irrefragable, of a subtle disease, that had long since begun to eat into the real substance of his character” (Hawthorne 147). Seven years later, he confesses that he is Pearl’s father and he committed adultery with Hester Prynne. Tired of the guilt, Dimmesdale brands an ‘A’ on his chest to represent his sin just like Hester (Miller). Shortly after confessing, Dimmesdale dies.
Dimmesdale instead keeps his scarlet letter close to his heart. “‘But why does he not wear it outside his bosom, as thou dost, mother?’” (Hawthorne, 150) Pearls asks Hester in the forest. He doesn’t wear it outside his bosom because he has not revealed his sin to the members of the community. Dimmesdale’s health deteriorates since the moment he does not reveal his sin. Roger Chillingworth says “In such case, it could only be the symptom of a highly disordered mental state, when a man, rendered morbidly self-contemplative by long, intense, and secret pain, had extended his egotism over the whole expanse of nature” (Hawthorne, 126). Dimmesdale wishes that he could show his sin like Hester “‘Happy are you, Hester, that wear the scarlet letter openly on your bosom! Mine burns in secret!’” (Hawthorne, 154) It is indeed his “secret pain” that kills him in the
In June 1642, the townspeople of the Massachusetts Bay Colony gathered together in front of the scaffold to see the the punishment that would be levied on the young women, Hester Prynne. Hester Prynne was guilty of adultery and forced to stand upon the scaffold for three hours. While Hester was standinding on the scaffold, she was subject to name calling and constant questioning, by the other women of the town. As Hester was being shamed, she noticed and man in the crowd, it was her husband, who was presumed to be dead. Her husband, angered deeply by this, vowed to find the man responsible for this, and selected the new name Roger Chillingworth. The reverend, John Wilson, and the Minister, Arthur Dimmesdale questioned Hester, but she refused to reveal the the father.
When Chillingworth asks Hester the identity of her lover, she refuses to answer. Because of this, Chillingworth makes her promise never to reveal that he is her husband. After Hester is released from prison, she goes to live in a small cottage at the edge of town. After a few years, people begin to notice that her daughter, Pearl, behaves very strangely, and they threaten to take her away from Hester. Hester takes Pearl to Governor Bellingham's mansion planning to plead for the right to keep her daughter. At the mansion she is met by the governor and his three guests, Reverend Wilson, Reverend Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingworth. Reverend Dimmesdale convinces the governor to allow Hester to keep Pearl. Chillingworth, who has been living with Reverend Dimmesdale since his arrival in town, begins to suspect that Reverend Dimmesdale is the father of Pearl. One evening while Dimmesdale is sleeping, Chillingworth examines Dimmesdale's chest and finds something which confirms his suspicion. From this moment on, Chillingworth devotes himself to seeking revenge. One night, Dimmesdale is so tormented by his conscience that he goes and stands on the scaffold that Hester had stood on seven years earlier. As he is standing there, he sees Hester and Pearl walk by and he calls them onto the scaffold with him. After he acknowledges his guilt to them, a giant red A
On June 1642, in Boston, people gather to see the punishment of a young girl by the name of Hester Prynne, she was found guilty of cheating and was forced to wear a scarlet A on her clothes as a sign of shame because of it. Also, she should stand on the scaffold for three hours she was open to much humiliation when the young girl came to the scaffold, lots of the females there are upset because of her beauty and dignity. She was told and persuaded to name her child’s Father, but she refused. When she looks out over into the people, she can see a little, irregular man that she recognizes and it turns out to be her long-lost husband, who was supposed to be lost at sea. When her husband sees her on the scaffold in shame, he asks a man why she’s
Hester chooses to boldly submit to the Puritan method of penitence rather than to reveal cowardice and flee New England for a new life. She does this, not to preserve the social order, but rather to deconstruct it. In this deconstruction process Hester is able to prove her moral and ethical critics wrong through her self-defining behavior, while at the same time instilling both courage and pride in her beloved daughter. Hester does not feel any remorse for the unfaithfulness to her husband, Roger Chillingworth, as she brazenly explains in thought here:...It seemed a fouler offence committed by Roger Chillingworth, than any which had since been done him, that, in the time when her heart knew no better, he had persuaded her to fancy herself happy by his
As Hester settled into her new home she befriended a young man, Reverend Dimmesdale. They developed a companionship over a period of two years after Hester had arrived in the new country. This union turned into an affair, which left Hester pregnant without anyone knowing the father’s identity. Hester’s husband was “lost at sea” so everyone knew that Hester’s affair was out of infidelity. The town turned against Hester and accused Hester of adultery. Hester lived in a community of Puritans who had very strick rules. Adultry was a very big sin that when committed could be resolved in death. For Hester's punishment she was lead up on the schfold in front of the whole town. It was as if she was in a trile but had nobody defending her. As she had her baby Pearl in her arms she was asked who the father was, but she would not say. Soon the reader finds out that the father is Reven Dimmesdale. During Hester's trile her was very nervous that she would tell. If she would have told he would have been sentenced to death. To the end of her trile she did not say who was the father but she could only live because of her baby and she has to wear a letter A on her cloths for now
The setting of the story is 1600s in a Puritan settlement. The main character of our story, Hester Prynne is branded with a scarlet letter (an A) for adultery and is being led out into the town from prison to be reprimanded for her sins. Her husband, a scholar from overseas, has not arrived yet allegedly and is believed to have been lost out at sea. Hester has had an affair and given birth to a child (named Pearl), and refuses to tell the name of the father despite being verbally attacked by the townspeople. Because of her adultery and unwillingness to disclose his
After being found guilty of adultery, Hester is forced to wear a scarlet letter “A” on her clothing as a public sign of shame. Her long lost husband, now under a new name to remain unknown, reappears after being presumed lost at sea. With revenge on his mind, a drama explodes around Hester. Over many years, her lover Dimmesdale falls ill and the new town physician Chillingsworth spends many hours by his bedside, only to start believing that Arthur is the father of Pearl, Hester’s out-of-wedlock child. When pleading with Dimmesdale, Hester begs him to leave for Europe so that they can start a new life together. This plan fails when Hester discovers that Chillingsworth is also to be a passenger. Eventually, Dimmesdale dies in Hester’s arms, and losing an opportunity at revenge, Chillingsworth dies shortly after. With a large amount of money left to her, Pearl and her mother relocate to Europe to start a new life (Hawthorne).
When Donald Trump announced that he intended to run for president, no one took him seriously; however, President Trump became the center of attention after a few short weeks. While there are many people who believe Donald Trump will better our nation, there are just as many who think he will destroy it because Hillary Clinton has more political experience. However, experience is not always good experience. In March of 2015, the media came across an email scandal. While Hillary Clinton served under President Obama as Secretary of State, she used her family’s private email server for official communications that violated major rules, and at the same time allowed the Benghazi crisis to occur right under her nose. President Trump is also bashed by individuals who believe he will corrupt our government because he is not a good politician, but due to his
In the history of books, novels, and literature, in general, there is no shortage of unique characters. This is also especially true for Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. It is also true that The Scarlet Letter is full of complex characters and situations. We, for example, can take Roger Chillingworth, examine him as a whole, and break down his speech and actions to see his true self. Shall we begin?
The meaning of our code “Integrity first, service before self, and excellence in all we do” as we progress into AFJROTC makes our current cadets think about those words as I have myself, though to other people these could have different meanings. Integrity first doesn’t only mean being honest, but integrity is being honest through thick and thin never wanting nor actually lying to anyone about anything. Keeping honesty can build trust within a group of people even a single person, many people are more likely to trust a person who keeps honesty in their relationship. The AFJROTC cadets have used integrity to get through the program I use integrity in my life to be able and wrap around my head that honesty is one of the best qualities that gets you through life in easier manners.