Compare And Contrast Hester And Dimmesdale

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There are always two sides to a story. In most cases, it can be the truth and the lie or the good and the bad but in some cases, although rare, it can be two different sides to the same truth, view or idea. Hester and Dimmesdale perfectly portray that thought. They are, you can say, two sides of the same coin. And if one side of the coin does not exist, then the coin is no longer a coin. It is a two dimensional drawing on a dull piece of paper. If they are two different ways of telling an idea, then one side, surely, is just as important as the other. It will only lead to a more veracious truth or a heated argument. The two ideas that these two different characters are not between good and evil; they are two ideas that compare and contrast the effects on the host depending on how they dealt with, in this case, their sin; adultery. Hester deals with it openly and publicly while on the other hand, Dimmesdale is reserved and private about it. …show more content…

It is because his pain needs compared to Hester’s. His choice needs to have its alternate. The reader needs to see what could have happened if Dimmesdale had chosen another path, had chosen his second option, or vice versa. Nathaniel Hawthorne perfectly intertwines the two characters. Arthur Dimmesdale, a perfect, religious clergyman that the people of the community believe to be an angel sent to guide them into the promised land and Hester Prynne, the young woman of the community that slept with someone other than her husband and is looked down upon by every person and even heaven itself. Every character needs its opposite. Arthur and Hester are not the good guys and Roger Chillingworth is not their opposite. Roger is just a character needed to move the story along; a character needed to bring the opposites together into one. The story moves around Hester and him. No one wants to read a story about a girl that got knocked up, they want to read one where her lover gets into as much trouble as she

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