Hester Prynne's Morality

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The Scarlet Letter, a novel written by Nathaniel Hawthorne and published in the year of 1850, still contains an immense amount of relevance today. The story questions the morality of many characters, also dealing with private and public coping mechanisms of the two main characters, Hester Prynne, seamstress, and Arthur Dimmesdale, minister. Adulterers such as themselves make the words “sinners” and “paramours” synonymous, causing shame and upturned noses to be plastered anywhere Hester was at the start of the novel. Dimmesdale, a coward of a man, only confessed his sin moments before collapsing to the ground of the scaffold and dying in his lover’s arms. In turn, Hester received the most chagrin for this act of both passion and impropriety …show more content…

Hester Prynne’s morality is the source of her strength. It is why she is quick to act depending on her circumstances, and she always makes the decisions she believes to be correct. She was convicted of adultery after the discovery of her pregnancy while her husband was missing. Said husband, whose name has been purposely forgotten, was assumed dead at the time. He was held hostage by Native Americans some time ago and no one saw of him ever again. Prynne’s punishment could have been more severe if her husband was alive, but because it was unknown, she only had to wear the red letter “A” on her bosom for the rest of her life. Due to this punishment, Hester became known as the town adulteress. She was pressed for the name of the man that committed this sin with her but she denied it each time, so she was also known as a condoner of sin. Because of these convictions and public shame, Prynne received more than enough punishment the first couple of years by even the Puritan women of the society. “‘At the very least, they should have put the brand of a hot iron on Hester Prynne’s forehead. Madame Hester would have winced at that, I warrant me. But she- the naughty baggage- little will she care …show more content…

He cannot confess a sin to save his life. It is declared that the old “leech” is the one who has committed the deepest sin between the three of them. He has “violated, in cold blood, the sanctity of a human heart. Thou and I, Hester, never did so!” (Hawthorne 215.) or more specifically, Dimmesdale’s heart. The clergyman has also clearly stated that he has had plenty of penance, but no penitence, which is questionable. If Dimmesdale had truly no regrets for what he did, and if he truly loved Prynne and their daughter, he would have come out to say it publicly earlier. “In the pulpit, Dimmesdale repeatedly intends to make a confession, and repeatedly he does; but it is a “vague,” a ritual confession…” (Warren 34.) He confessed his sin on the scaffold and paid for it with the last breaths he had, but he was deemed a madman. Years of repression and guilt drove him insane! He was never prepared to leave the Puritan village. His reputation had not yet been splattered by the public, so he actually had a life there, whereas Hester did

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