The Scarlett Letter

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The Demise of a Guilty Mind Several factors can cause a character to change himself or herself as an individual. It can range from the present set of affairs of the surrounding environment to the person’s own conscience. Such alterations can be detected in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlett Letter. Local reverend of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Arthur Dimmesdale was admired by, in essence, everyone. He had undergone particular experiences that ultimately led to his release, physically and spiritually. The reader is first introduced to Hester Prynne, who was convicted of adultery. Through this immoral act, she welcomes a child into the world, whom she named Pearl. The whole controversy that Hawthorne centralized the story around was Hester’s hesitancy to reveal Pearl’s father. She held on to this secret for seven years until a certain reverend professes and admits it was he who had done the deed (Spoiler: it’s Dimmesdale). Arthur Dimmesdale is presented as a respected and applauded man who had a way with words. As the town’s Puritan minister, he was “supposed to be the absolute pinna...

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