Guiltiness In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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Guiltiness Brings Craziness in the World In the tightly strung world we live in today it is hard to keep secrets. Whether your secret is bad or good there is a reason why it is a secret; they are not meant for everyone to hear. In the novel, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester Prynne commits adultery and has a child, Pearl, with Dimmesdale, who is the town’s minister. They try to keep it a secret that Dimmesdale is the father so he can keep his job as the minister. As we all know, secrets only stay secrets for so long. There is always a reason to why the secret leaks out; the guilt of keeping secrets makes people go mentally and physically insane. The saying, “secrets secrets are no fun, unless you tell everyone” is exactly Hester’s problem. In the beginning of the book there is a big town gathering. They are all eagerly waiting for Hester to come out and be shunned in front of all of them for committing adultery. …show more content…

Dimmesdale also struggles throughout the book with guilt. Hester dealt with more of a mental struggle, while Dimmesdale’s guilt physically gets the best of him. In Dimmesdale’s secret closet was a bloody scourge, which he would whip himself “rigorously, and until his knees trembled beneath him, as an act of penance. He kept vigils, likewise, night after night” (127). Dimmesdale’s way of trying to free himself of his guilt is to physically abuse himself. He whips and makes himself stay awake throughout the nights for punishment. He doesn’t know what else to do with himself but to make himself feel worse. He tells “Hester, I am most miserable” (166). As a reader this can be very sad. It is hard to read about others people’s struggles that they can’t help. Dimmesdale thought he was doing the right thing by keeping his secret, but the guilt is overpowering him now. Setting yourself up for guilt will not work out for you in the end because it will just make you go

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