Thursday, November 28, 2019
Dimmesdale Is A Self-confessed Coward And Hypocrite. He Knows What He
  Dimmesdale is a self-confessed coward and hypocrite. He knows what he has to do to  still the voice of his conscience and make his peace with God. throughout the entire story  his confession remains an obstacle. While Hester is a relatively constant character,    Dimmesdale is incredibly dynamic. From his fall with Hester, he moves in steps toward  his public hint of sinning at the end of the novel. He tries to unburden himself of his sin  by revealing it to his congregation, but somehow can never quite manage this. He is a  typical diagnosis of a "coward"    To some extent, Dimmesdale's story is one of a single man tempted into depth of  the hormonal world. This world, however, is a place where the society treats sexuality  with ill grace. His problem is enormously complicated by the fact of Hester's marriage,  for him, and by his own image of himself as a cleric devoted to higher things. Unlike  other men, Dimmesdale can not accept his loss of innocence and go on from there. He  must struggle futilely to get back to where he was. Torn between the desire to confess  and atone the cowardice which holds him back, Dimmesdale goes slightly mad. He takes  up some morbid forms of penance-fasts and scourgings, but he can neither whip or starve  the sin out of his soul. In his agony, he staggers to the pulpit to confess, but his words  come out generalized and meaningless declarations of guilt. Dimmesdale seems to want  to reveal himself, but Chillingsworht's influence and his own shame are stronger than his  weak conscience. Dimmesdale can not surrender an identity which brings him love and  admiration of his parishioners . He is too intent to on his earthly image to willingly reveal  his sin. Once Hester explains Chillingsworth's plans and breaks Chillingsworth's spell,    Dimmesdale begins to overcome him. He does it, though, in a way which brings him  more earthly glory. Thus, Dimmesdale never loses his cherished image, and  consequently, is pushed down the "oily slope" even further. I think there is a problem  with Dimmesdale, unlike the community. During his struggles to tell the parishioners the  truth, they misunderstand his statements, he loses his faith, which is never completely  regained. Dimmesdale's sin has eaten away at him, reducing him to a shriveling, pathetic  creature. The only thing that brings him any strength is his re-affirmation of his sin with    Hester, and the plot to escape the town(201): "It was the exhilarating effect-upon a  prisoner just escaped from the dungeon of his own heart of breathing the wild, free  atmosphere of an unrdeemed, un christianized, lawless region". In short, fallen nature has  set him free from his inner distress, but left him in an "unchristianized" world, a heathen  world, damnation. He has fallen into sin. He has, in effect, willingly agreed to commit  more sins. Dimmesdale realizes he is doing this but is too much of a coward to admit his  original sin to the public. He has become a figure that no one can help but himself.    Dimmesdale begins as a fallen man, falls further, and near the end is, according  to Mistress Hibbins, a servant of the devil (242). Hibbin's words, however not be taken  lightly. She seems to be the only character that shows herself to have a mouth of truth.    Dimmesdale attempts to recover, though, with a massive effort, when he ascends the  scaffold with Hester and Pearl. When Chillingsworth exclaims, "thou hast escaped me!"  (256), he is speaking not only for himself , but for evil. Dimesdale has at least escaped  damnation. He makes another small step forward when Pearl kisses him. "A spell was  broken"(256). The redeeming angel has pulled Dimesdale clear of the shadow of sin but  not away from its presence. After the kiss, Dimmesdale returns to speaking of God as  merciful, and returns to praising him. He claims, "Had either of these agonies ("Burning  torture upon his breast" and Chillingsworth's influence) been waiting, I had been lost  forever" (257). Dimmesdale believes himself to be saved. On the contrary, I think that his  attempt to confess was not a complete confession at all. He never truly stater that he had  committed adultery with Hester, and that Pearl in fact is his doughter. Dimmesdale, the  reverend could bring them up to the scaffold, but still did not have the courage to  honestly confess. The sermon in which there was supposed to be a "Nobel climax," was  empty of such a thing. An incomplete confession    
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