Hypocrisy In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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The Scarlet Letter The Puritan Community and Sin: Hypocrisy in the Scarlet Letter The Puritan community is described as a “utopia of human virtue and happiness” (42) in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter. Being a Christian community, the community prides itself on its virtues and its values. On the surface, the Puritan community seems to be fair and just, attempting to follow God’s words. This idea, however, is shallow, and through deeper observation, it can be seen that the Puritan community’s values are flawed and hypocritical. The story revolves around the sin that Hester Prynne committed against her husband, Roger Chillingworth: adultery with a Puritan minister named Arthur Dimmesdale. Hawthorne examines the role of the community …show more content…

Being a reverend, the community sees him as the pinnacle of purity, a perfect person, and someone they could look up to. His “eloquence and religious fervor had already given the earnest of high eminence in his profession (59). Dimmesdale, though he is the father of Pearl, knows his reputation among the community, If Dimmesdale were to tell the community that he was the one that Hester had her affair with, then he believed that his reputation as a religious symbol would have been ruined. Since the community thought so highly of him, Dimmesdale believed that he could not tell them the …show more content…

No one ever would have believed that he was the father of Pearl. Thus, not even Dimmesdale himself was able to convince the community that he was a sinner. Dimmesdale tried to tell the Puritans that he had sinned, and that he was “vile, a viler companion of the vilest, the worst of sinners, an abomination, a thing of unimaginable iniquity” (130). But the community didn’t buy it and only “reverence him the more” as a “saint on earth” (130). The community thought so highly of Dimmesdale that they would not believe him when he told them that he had sinned. Later, Dimmesdale let out a shriek at the scaffold, and he was convinced that “the whole town will awake, and hurry forth” (134), and find him there, figuring out his secret. Yet, no one woke up, and they mistook the cry for a witch. The community’s ignorance of Dimmesdale’s shriek represents their ignorance of his sin. And when Dimmesdale dropped his glove on the scaffold, the minister who found it believed that Satan had dropped it there. Even when Dimmesdale, after the end of his final speech, tears open his shirt to reveal the scarlet letter on his chest, the Puritans were still skeptical. Some believed that they saw the scarlet letter, and others insisted they saw nothing at all. But overall, nobody blamed Dimmesdale or thought of him as a sinner; instead, they “placed him already among saints and angels” (237). The community simply was not

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