Essay On The Scarlet Letter Dimmesdale Should Be Forgiven

497 Words1 Page

The Scarlet Letter scrutinizes the idea of Hester Prynne being forgivable: a sinner and a saint, unlike Dimmesdale and Chillingworth. Although it seems that Hester has committed a serious crime of adultery, it was Dimmesdale and Chillingworth, who are the undeniable hypocrites due to being devoured by their own sins. Hester and Dimmesdale should’ve been forgiven. They should be forgiven because Hester in all of her power tries to teach and control Pearl. The supporting quote from the book “Hester is trying to protect and control Pearl, but Pearl is trying to protect her mother.” Pearl an infant pestilence-the scarlet fever or some half-fledged angel of judgment whose mission was to punish the sins of the rising generations. The connecting statement from the book “she screamed and shouted too with a terrific volume sound which caused the hearts of the …show more content…

The supporting quote “Dimmesdale gets Hester to meet him in the middle of the night and told her that he will admit his sin and stand by you.” The connecting statement “Dimmesdale goes to the scaffold where Hester had gone on with her public ordering and waits for people to throw food at him. Later Hester and Pearl join him and ask Dimmesdale if he will stand with me tomorrow at noon.” The last reason why Dimmsdale and Hester should be forgiven because Hester cares about Dimmesdale and forgives him for not facing his sin for 7 years. The connecting quote “Hester is shocked how bad Dimmesdale looks. Hester knows his conscience is working with him and made him sick. She realizes that Dimmesdale was appealing to her that night on the scaffold to protect him from Chillingworth.” Hester decides that she should help him despite the fact that Dimmesdale has done nothing for the past 7

Open Document