Arthur Dimmesdale's Moral Tragedy In The Scarlet Letter

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Dimmesdale’s Moral Tragedy

The Ten Commandments plainly say you, "'Shall not commit adultery.” In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s historical story, The Scarlet Letter, Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale, bares the most brutal effects of such sin. This is due to several reasons. The most observable reason for his eventual breakdown is the fact that he keeps his sin a secret. Arthur Dimmesdale's sin was the same as Hester's, except Arthur, through his own disagreeable actions, leaves himself in a position to either ignore the community's idea that he is a pure and Godly man or to trick them. For most of The Scarlet Letter, Dimmesdale chose to lie. Dimmesdale also believes that his sin has taken the meaning out of his life. His life's work has been dedicated …show more content…

Chillingworth delved deep into Dimmesdale, in a cruel attempt to dig up some dirt and make Dimmesdale confess to what Chillingworth suspected of him. Hawthorne points out that Chillingworth, “dug into the poor clergyman’s heart, like a miner searching for gold; or rather, like a sexton delving into a grave, possibly in quest of a jewel . . . but likely to find nothing save mortality and corruption” (118). Chillingworth was bound and determined to find something to incriminate Dimmesdale. All this internal exploration made Dimmesdale weak but he still would not let his secret go.
At the end of chapter ten, Chillingworth suspecting that Dimmesdale had more to hide, he decided to look at Dimmesdale’s chest, under his vestment, while he was sleeping. Hawthorne does not tell us exactly what Chillingworth saw on Dimmesdale’s exposed breast, but there had to have been something to initiate Chillingworth’s curious actions. Upon seeing whatever he saw, “he threw up his arms towards the ceiling, and stamped his foot upon the floor” (Hawthorne 127). Seeing Dimmesdale’s pasty bosom likely wouldn’t have ignited such “ecstasy” in Chillingworth (Hawthorne

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