Guilt In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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Guilt can destroy a person, morally and physically. As shown throughout “The Scarlet Letter”, people can change because of a secret that is digging inside. Hester Prynne, Arthur Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingworth were proof of that throughout the novel. Although Chillingworth’s guilt was insignificant compared to the guilt shared by Arthur and Hester, he is still laced with the same feelings. Hester Prynne knows that committing adultery is wrong and a sin, and she realizes that her future “would pile up their miser upon the heap of shame” (pg.73).However most of her guilt is shown through her daughter Pearl. Hester feels as though she has wronged her daughter, and she isn’t even a toddler yet. The other children that are playing in the town have picked up on their parent’s attitude toward Hester and have now passed it on to Pearl. Sometimes Hester will just stare at her daughter and cry out “O Father in Heaven,-if thou art still my father, -what is this being which I have …show more content…

He never came out as being the lover at the public humiliation. As being a clergyman, he is held to a higher standard, which affects his ability to come forth. People began to notice that Arthurs “health had severely suffered”, and to the day it had been three years since the public humiliation of Hester (pg. 99). So keeping this huge secret in for such a lengthy time has taken a toll. Then when Hester stopped Arthur in the forest a few years from the first description of his health. He asks Hester if she has found peace, smiles and comes back with the same question. He replies “None! - nothing but despair” and precedes to call himself an atheist (pg. 172). By this, you can understand that not saying anything about his involvement has proved to be more of a hassle then a help. In the end of the book, Arthur goes to the scaffolding that Hester originally stood on and confessed, he then dies in Hester’s

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