The Scarlet Letter

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Arthur Dimmesdale's soul was jeopardized by Roger Chillingworth's intentions, which were to ruin him, but his only messiah, is Pearl. Dimmesdale must embrace Pearl as his daughter and publicly confess to be free from his self-inflicted torture.
Arthur Dimmesdale's soul was placed in jeopardy since we first saw him. He foreshadowed to Hester Prynne about what the effect of her silence would do to him. He said, ';What can thy silence do for him, except it tempt him — yea, compel him, as it were — to add hypocrisy to sin?….'; pg.62. His sin, as plainly put, was that he had committed adultery with Hester Prynne, and throughout the novel his struggle for the truth and his honorability becomes greater and greater.
The man responsible for Dimmesdale's torment was Roger Chillingworth. Chillingworth prays vengeance on Hester's partner in crime (Dimmesdale) not Hester herself. When he visited Hester in prison he said, 'He bears no letter of infamy wrought into his garment, as thou dost; but I shall read it on his heart…'; pg.70, this quote foreshadows the symbol that Chillingworth sees on Dimmesdale's chest. Chillingworth claims he can be Dimmesdale's savior because he can cure his illness, or really his guilt. The truth to this is that Chillingworth acts as if he were Dimmesdale's friend and through doing this he really will not save him but lead him to his demise.
Dimmesdale knows he must confess publicly and acknowledge Pearl as his daughter, to be free from his internal struggle. Pearl asks the minister if he will hold her hand and her mother's hand at noon time the next day. This is giving Dimmesdale a chance to confess and save his soul. If he acknowledges Pearl as his daughter, and confesses publicly, he will be able to embrace god because he will be free from Chillingworth's desired attainment.
At the end, Dimmesdale frees his soul by publicly confessing.

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