Arthur Dimmesdale Hypocrisy

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Nathaniel Hawthorne portrays Rev. Arthur Dimmesdale from the Scarlet Letter as a man ridden with guilt and hypocrisy to fulfill his role as a corrupt person. The author specifically uses guilt to exemplify Dimmesdale’s role as a culpable person. Dimmesdale’s guilt is represented through his constant chest pains, “On that spot, in very truth, there was, and there had long been, the gnawing and poisonous tooth of bodily pain,” (Hawthorne 102). Hawthorne utilizes this symbol throughout the novel to display the guilty and corrupt personality of Arthur Dimmesdale. The pain resembles the guilt and the sin that lurks his soul. Roger Chillingworth became stationed in Dimmesdale’s home in order to tend to his pains, and Chillingworth concluded that …show more content…

In the talk in the garden between the men of the town and Hester, Dimmesdale makes a speech about why Hester should keep Pearl and raise her. He makes symbolic references to the “‘father’s guilt,’” (Hawthorne 68) and the “‘sinful father,’” (Hawthorne 68) in a way that conceals his important secret, being the father of Pearl, from the other people in the conversation. In this instance of the novel, we see that Dimmesdale is a hypocrite, in the way that he has the will to bash the “unknown father” of Pearl, himself, to make sure the other gentlemen in the conversation such as Chillingworth, Bellingham, and Wilson, will not catch on to his act of sin. Even more, in the third chapter where Pearl accompanies Hester on the scaffold, Dimmesdale states: “‘...though he were to step down from a high place, and stand there beside thee, on thy pedestal of shame, yet better were it so, than to hide a guilty heart through life.’” (Hawthorne 38). From this excerpt, Dimmesdale shows that he knows the direct feelings of the father of Pearl, and that he would want to join her on the scaffold for his sin, but keeps his feelings a secret from the Puritan community. Finally, the preaching of Dimmesdale throughout the novel about the evils of sin supports his hypocritical character identity. Dimmesdale’s preaching represents the biggest extremity of his hypocrisy. He preaches about how

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