РефератыИностранный языкHyHypocrisy In The Scarlet Letter Essay Research

Hypocrisy In The Scarlet Letter Essay Research

Hypocrisy In The Scarlet Letter Essay, Research Paper


The Scarlet H


The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne is about the trials and


tribulations of Hester Prynne, a woman living in colonial Boston. Found


guilty of adultery, Hester’s punishment is to wear a visible symbol of her sin:


the scarlet letter “A.” Through the book, the reader comes to know Hester,


the adulteress; Dimmesdale, the holy man Hester had the affair with; and


Chillingworth, the estranged husband of Hester who is out for revenge. The


Scarlet Letter examines the interaction of these characters and the reaction


of these characters to Hester’s sin. Although Hester’s sin is at first supposed


to be adultery, in fact adultery is just one of the many bases Hawthorne


could use to build the story around. The underlying sin that Hawthorne


deals with in The Scarlet Letter is hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is the practice of


professing beliefs, feelings, or virtues that one does not hold or possess. All


three main characters, Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth, commit the


sin of hypocrisy. Hawthorne shows that hypocrisy is indeed a sin by


punishing the offenders.


Hester Prynne is a strong, independent woman who deals with her sin


of adultery very well. Instead of running away from it, she lives with it and


accepts her punishment. However, while succumbing to the will of the court,


she does not for an instant truly believe that she sinned. Hester thinks that


she has not committed adultery because in her mind she wasn’t really


married to Chillingworth. Hester believes that marriage is only valid when


there is love, and there is no love between Hester and Chillingworth. In the


prison, defending her actions against him, she declares, “Thou knowest, thou


knowest that I was frank with thee. I felt no love, nor feigned any” (74).


Then, later, speaking to Dimmesdale, Hester further imparts her belief that


she has not sinned, saying, “What we did had a consecration of its own. We


felt it so” (192). Therefore, Hester, in her mind, has not committed a sin.


The fact that she accepts the courts decision so meekly and wears the scarlet


letter denoting her as an adulteress is the first way in which she is


hypocritical. Hester, although she does not believe she has sinned, portrays


herself as a sinner by wearing the scarlet letter without complaint. Over the


ensuing years, Hester endures the shame and ridicule brought about by the


scarlet letter. However, the true source of the shame and ridicule is not


adultery, but her own sin of hypocrisy. If Hester had not been hypocritical, if


she had instead told the townspeople how she truly felt, then perhaps she


would have earned their respect and not have forced to undergo the


humiliation and punishment of the scarlet letter. Hester’s acceptance of a


false sin is not the only hypocritical act she carries out. Another way in


which Hester is hypocritical is her agreement with Chillingworth to keep his


name a secret. Hester, even though she claims to love Dimmesdale, agrees


with Chillingworth to keep Chillingworth’s name and mission secret (76).


Hester is responsible for the pain that Chillingworth causes Dimmesdale,


because she allows him to enter Dimmesdale’s house without warning


Dimmesdale.


Arthur Dimmesdale, Hester’s partner in adultery, is another character


who is punished for his hypocrisy. Dimmesdale is a minister, one whom the


people look up to for guidance and direction. The people consider him almost


sinless, the perfect model which to follow. The townspeople thought of him


as “a true priest, a true religionist, with the reverential sentiment largely


developed, and an order of mind that impelled itself powerfully along the


track of creed” (120). Believing himself to have committed the grave sin of


adultery, Dimmesdale’s responsibility is to step down from his clerical


position or at least admit his sin to the public. Instead, Dimmesdale hides


/>

his sin and actually uses Hester’s sin in his sermons. A “true priest” would


not hide his sin from his congregation, as Dimmesdale does. The fact that


Dimmesdale hides his own sin while expounding on Hester’s sin, which is


actually the same, makes Dimmesdale a hypocrite. Dimmesdale is not only


hypocritical to his congregation, but to Hester as well. Dimmesdale commits


an act of adultery with Hester. He does so secure in the knowledge that he


loved her, and she loved him. However, when it comes time to pay for their


actions, Dimmesdale declines. Dimmesdale refuses to climb the scaffold with


Hester to acknowledge the sin. Dimmesdale, although professing his love for


her, refuses to be associated with her. Hester explains this to Pearl, saying


“[Dimmesdale] will be there, child. But he will not greet thee to-day” (224).


Dimmesdale’s refusal to be associated with Hester is cowardly, as is his


refusal to climb the scaffold. It is hypocritical because he claims to love her,


but he wants to keep that love secret.


Roger Chillingworth, the husband of Hester Prynne, is the third


character who commits the sin of hypocrisy. Chillingworth’s hypocrisy is


directed towards the practice of medicine. All doctors are supposed to care


for their patients, according to the Hippocratic Oath. Chillingworth, a doctor,


should adhere to this oath, but instead he breaks his vows and consciously


uses his skill to hurt his patient, Dimmesdale. For Chillingworth, it is a


matter of revenge, but that does not justify his betrayal of the vows which he


took. Boasting to Hester, Chillingworth relates how he enjoyed torturing his


patient (168). When Hester asks him if he hasn’t tortured poor Dimmesdale


enough, Chillingworth responds, “No! — no! — He has but increased the debt!”


(169). The fact that Chillingworth takes pleasure in his patient’s discomfort


while at the same time claiming to be a physician of the highest caliber


makes Chillingworth a hypocrite. He is punished by Hawthorne for his


hypocrisy. Hawthorne makes Chillingworth deformed, both physically and


mentally. Chillingworth has been gnarled with age, but his mental condition


is worse. He has turned into a man bent on revenge, with no regard for


anything except sating his thirst for revenge. Chillingworth proceeds to lay


blame of his own present deformities on Dimmesdale. According to


Chillingworth, it is Dimmesdale’s fault that he, Chillingworth, is a “fiend.”


Aside from being hypocritical towards his medicine, Chillingworth is


hypocritical regarding Hester as well. Chillingworth admits to Hester that


he is to blame for their poor marriage. He says,


It was my folly!. The world had been so cheerless! My heart


was a habitation large enough for many guests, but lonely and


chill, and without a household fire. I longed to kindle one!.


And so, Hester, I drew thee into my heart, into its innermost


chamber, and sought to warm thee by the warmth which thy


presence made there! (74).


Chillingworth goes on to admit that he has no desire for vengeance against


Hester: “I seek no vengeance, plot no evil against thee. Between thee and


me, the scale hangs fairly balanced” (74). Later on, Chillingworth shows that


he was lying when he says “I have left thee to the scarlet letter. If that have


not avenged me, I can do no more!” (169). Chillingworth, despite what he


said earlier, had been avenging himself not only on Dimmesdale, but on


Hester as well, demonstrating again the lying, hypocritical ways he practices.


Through the punishment of the three main characters, Hester,


Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth, Hawthorne clearly shows that hypocrisy is


a sin meriting terrible punishment. The sin of adultery, for which Hester is


branded, is not the true sin in The Scarlet Letter. Rather, it is just one


possible sin that can lead the sinner and those involved into the treacherous


depths of hypocrisy, the true sin of The Scarlet Letter.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Hypocrisy In The Scarlet Letter Essay Research

Слов:1396
Символов:9337
Размер:18.24 Кб.