Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Man Vs. Himself In The Scarlet Letter by Hawthorne :: essays research papers
           A great deal of blood has been shed and many wars have been fought during the history of    civilization; however, manââ¬â¢s     greatest battle and most formidable enemy is only himself. This has been made only more evident    with the passage of     time and the development of the human character. However, one factor that has remained constant    in the human     character through this development is conscience. Conscience can be manââ¬â¢s saving grace or his    damning affliction; its     presence may simultaneously purify and mar. As contradictory as this may sound, it has been    explored in depth by     Nathaniel Hawthorne who chronicles one manââ¬â¢s battle against himself in The Scarlet Letter. In    this novel, an anguished     Arthur Dimmesdale struggles to pacify his conscience and withhold the secret of his sin from    being known. As his     conscience continues to consume all that is his very essence, Arthur Dimmesdale illustrates    Hawthorneââ¬â¢s theme of a     sin-stained conscience and redemption only through truth. The novel begins to delve into the    heart and conscience of     Arthur Dimmesdale when Roger Chillingworth questions him about his thoughts on sinners and their    secrets. Feeling full     well the torment of his own secret, Arthur proclaims that those who hold such "miserable    secretsâ⬠¦will yield them up that     last dayâ⬠¦with a joy unutterable." By this expression, Arthur offers a glimpse into his tortured    heart and shows how heavy     a burden his secret is. When Chillingworth further inquires about such sinful secrets, Arthur    holds his hand to his breast, a     motion that he carries out as "if afflicted with an importunate throb of pain." Evidently Arthur    does this frequently, and the     reader is presented with the thought that this gesture possibly is not done as much out of    physical suffering as spiritual     suffering. Not only is the health of Arthurââ¬â¢s body in question, but the condition of his heart,    his soul, is dubious. A     supernatural light is later shed upon this question as Chillingworth uncovers the secret Arthur    had tried to keep intact. It is     visible to him as he pulls aside Arthurââ¬â¢s ministerial robe: a scarlet letter A upon his chest.    Although Hawthorne lets this     aspect of the novel remain ambiguous, this engraving on Arthurââ¬â¢s chest suggests that the burden    of his sin had seeped     so deeply within him, it has now forced its way outside; it is at all his levels. At this point    in the novel, Arthurââ¬â¢s sin had     begun, if it had not already succeeded, in consuming him. Arthurââ¬â¢s conscience was now stained    with sin, and its weight will     					    
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