Essay On The Scarlet Letter Hester's Fraud

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If you are like most high school students, then some of the time you feel insecure. If you feel insecure, then you will adapt and become an amiable person based on the situation. This occurs in my everyday life at Porter-Gaud. People feel like they do not meet the criteria of a clique, so they change their personality to better fit the group. Due to circumstance, Hester developed a type of personality that helped her overcome the sin put upon her. If it were not for the scarlet letter, Hester would not have responded in such a way that developed her as a brave and resilient woman. As Hester walked on the peninsula with Pearl, she saw Chillingworth and spoke with him, noticing the changes in him: “The scarlet letter burned on Hester Prynne's …show more content…

In addition to being accountable for her own sin, Hester realizes that she’s responsible for Dimmesdale’s and Chillingworth’s sins. This alters Hester into a person who takes the blame because she does not want others to get hurt. Sacvan Bercovitch gave a talk in 1996 in Salem, Massachusetts, called “The Scarlet Letter: A Twice-Told Tale.” In this talk, he clarifies to readers that the main reason this sin taxes Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth is due to the weight that the Puritan community places on it: “The sin in The Scarlet Letter is concealment: the deliberate masking of who one is in order to deny one's actual state of connectedness. Hester goes so far as to consider herself above the law, but the fact is that she's the very image of social interdependence.” Since Dimmesdale is the town minister, a lot of respect is directed toward him, so if he confessed his sin, he would be ridiculed and punished. On the other hand, Hester, because of her status as a woman who has gone against the laws of society, is chastised for her act of love due to a stagnant marriage. Both characters want to seek pleasure and avoid pain, yet it seems inevitable to achieve

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