Guilt In Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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Keeping a secret can cause a person to fall into state of guilt as they try to prevent themselves from spilling the beans. Especially an unsavory secret, the guilt of keeping it under wraps can eat at a person. For example, if a person accidentally murdered their friend they would have to keep it unknown in order to stay innocent. The remorse continues to pile up in the person's mind and it even causes them to be miserable. The longer the secret stays private, the worse it will get for the person. In Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale strongly depict the effects of guilt. One of the sides for the effects of guilt is how the character deals with their initial contact with it. Hester does not give into the Puritan's punishment of the A and instead of wallowing in guilt, she embraces it. She walks proudly with her rendition of the A, that included "elaborate embroidery" (Hawthorne, 37), and chooses not to hide underneath it. Hester's act of showcasing her A allows her to rebel against the Puritan's sacrosanct laws. On the other hand, Dimmesdale allows his cowardice to overcome his actions and is reluctant to reveal his secret. Instead of easing his …show more content…

After a few years of living with the scarlet letter, Hester's natural beauty vanished from her body as she grew cold with loneliness. It seemed as if her splendor had been "crushed out of her" (112) and her guilt slowly consumed her. Since her beauty was obscured by her letter, the effects of guilt consumed her. Similarly, Dimmesdale's physical features deteriorated as his guilt "haunted [him] day and night" (Poe, 1). He developed the becomings of a sadist and started to whip himself. In an attempt to cleanse his shameful mind, Dimmesdale began "to fast… until his knees trembled beneath him" (Hawthorne, 99). Without confessing to his sin, Dimmesdale has no punishment except the ones he inflicted on

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