Sin In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

632 Words3 Pages
In the Scarlet Letter, sin affects and influences two key characters. It affects a guilty husband by tearing his life apart and influences a doctor to torment and drive one character completely insane. These two people are well known in the community and uphold very important roles. Their names are Dimmesdale and Chillingsworth. Sin plays a major role in Dimmesdale’s life. First he has to witness Hester, the mother of his child, have to stand on the scaffold and be punished for committing adultery, which he aided her in. He takes this upon himself to punish himself physically and psychologically and the book tells us how his “health had severely suffered” (99).He would usually fast, as many Puritans were known to do, but he would take it to the next level to the point to where his knees trembled beneath him, as an act of penance"(99). Then he tries to confess to his congregation but the Preacher is only praised even more, which makes him feel even more ashamed. After a while, Chillingworth, Hester’s Husband, realizes Dimmesdale connection to Hester and sets out on a plot to make his life even more miserable. He leaves him mentally and emotionally damaged.…show more content…
He comes back to find her and her child, Pearl, on the scaffold for committing adultery, and sets out to find out why. He disguises himself in the community as a doctor, and finds out that Dimmesdale, the community preacher, was the Pearl’s father. When he realizes this, he gets extremely angry. He sets to find Dimmesdale and make his life miserable saying that “He was transferring himself into a devil”. After finding out Dimmesdale’s sin he completely changes. It is said that “there was something ugly and evil in his face” (116), and that “there came a glare of red light out of his eyes; as if the man’s soul were on fire. His entire life had become devoted to torturing Dimmesdale as much as he
Open Document