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The Affects Of Sin On Man In

The Scarlett Letter Essay, Research Paper


The Affects of Sin on the Individual in The Scarlet Letter


In the novel, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, there is a


reoccurring theme of the affects of sin on man. The three main characters, Hester


Pryne, Arthur Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingsworth, are all affected by the sin


of Hester Pryne and Arthur Dimmesdale. Hester Pryne is strengthened by the sin,


Arthur Dimmesdale is weakened by it, and Roger Chillingsworth becomes evil


because of it.


The protagonist, Hester Prynne is, in essence, strengthened by the sin she


commits with Arthur Dimmesdale. She turns the meaning of the letter ?A? from


adultery to able. She seeks redemption in the eyes of God and man through the


good deeds she does for others. She becomes ?self-ordained a Sister of Mercy,?


who?s new role is that of a tender nurse to the colony?s ill(158). She asserts that


fulfillment and love are worth fighting for, and she continues to walk about Puritan


Boston with her head held high. However, the sin she commits has the opposite


affect on her lover, Arthur Dimmesdale.


Weakness and frailty overcome the minister, Arthur Dimmesdale.


Dimmesdale becomes an unknowing victim to Hester Prynne?s husband, Roger


Chillingsworth. Chillingsworth maneuvers himself into an intimate friend and


constant attendant to Dimmesdale. The worse Dimmesdale feels, the stronger he


appears in the eyes of his congregation. He grows p

ale and thin and his


congregation assumes he is too pure to eat. His outward appearance comes from


his ritual of fasting until he faints. He also partakes in the penance of whipping


himself until he bleeds. Dimmesdale is trying to starve or scourge the sin from his


soul. This, to him, is an easier solution than ruining the virtuous image his


congregation has of him. Chillingsworth, on the other hand, does not seek


redemption from sin.


As a result of Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale?s sin, Roger


Chillingsworth becomes evil. Chillingsworth begins to feed on the sin by torturing


Dimmesdale. He constantly digs into the soul of Dimmesdale to find the evil he


suspects in him. ?Then why not reveal them[the sin] here?? inquires


Chillingsworth(128). Here he again tries to get Dimmesdale to reveal his sin. He


is an evil villain who is playing a game with his enemy. He feeds on the hidden sin


within Dimmesdale. He finds an evil power in watching Dimmesdale suffer.


Hawthorne justly calls Chillingsworth ?Satan?s emissary, in the guise of old Roger


Chillingsworth?(124).


In the novel The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the sin that Arthur


Dimmesdale and Hester Prynne commit have varying affects on the main


characters. Hester Prynne becomes a stronger woman, Arthur Dimmesdale


becomes a weak minister, and Arthur Chillingsworth becomes an evil villain.


Thus, Hawthorne uses these characters to show the affects of sin on man

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