Theme Of Psychological Issues In Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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A motor is to a boat as a mental plight is to the behavior of a person. The author develops a plot led by actions of characters with thinking influenced by complications. Hawthorne shows the contrast in character’s actions through their different internal issues throughout The Scarlet Letter. The psychological issues, such as revenge, guilt, and acceptance, that take place inside a character shape the individual’s actions directly. Roger Chillingworth, a physician and the spouse of the adulterer Hester Prynne, remains in a psychological complication with his search, need, and struggle for revenge against Dimmesdale, a Puritan minister and lover of Hester. Chillingworth’s suspicion of Dimmesdale being the lover of Hester leads “him to …show more content…

An evil appearance features as a motif throughout the novel; as Chillingworth pursues reprisal, his villainous look becomes more prevalent. Once Chillingworth discovers the letter “A,” the sign of an adulterer, carved into Dimmesdale’s chest, he reacts “with a ghastly rapture, as it were, too mighty to be expressed only by the eye and features, and therefore bursting forth through the whole ugliness of his figure, and making itself even riotously manifest by the extravagant gestures with which he threw up his arms towards the ceiling, and stamped his foot upon the floor” (109). Chillingworth’s enthralled mind reinforces the idea behind the discovery. A situation similar occurs in the short story “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe, where Montresor seeks revenge against a man that wronged him. The novel and short story consist of a character becoming obsessed with revenge and going to serious lengths to serve justice to a wrongdoer. Although Chillingworth’s mind and behavior consistently imposed on Dimmesdale’s mind, aiding in his downfall, Dimmesdale also fights a psychological warfare with himself. Arthur Dimmesdale battles with guilt in which he faced “long exquisite suffering; that his mind darkened and …show more content…

Hester surpasses the meaning of acceptance; she embraces her consequences. The character with the roughest path comes out psychological focused, displaying irony. The purpose shows the contrast between the independent woman who knows what she wants and the dependent man who exhibits meekness. John 8: 1-11 in the bible describes an event where people have gathered to stone a woman that has committed adultery. The bible and novel situation deal with a woman who has committed adultery and hypocritically sinful townspeople who persecute a woman. Hester remains psychologically sound and irrepressible. As a result, her actions remain the same; she makes her own path which foils the idea of controlling female sexuality. The characters in The Scarlet Letter being constantly set up against a certain obstacle shows how they approach it mentally impacts their actions. The character possesses the option to overcome the obstacle or to be defeated by it meaning their psychological state would be tarnished or renewed through overpowering feelings such as desire for revenge, guilt of sin, or acceptance of consequences. Throughout the novel, men’s issues defeat them and women overcome their issues. Men being meek and women being

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