Arthur Dimmesdale Weak

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Dimmesdale is a Weak Individual in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter
Everyone has their own weak moments, and everyone handles these moments differently. However, there are right and wrong ways to handle these weak moments. One can simply react positively and try to make the matter better or one can continue to drag on the weakness and have the moment get worse. Making the matter worse is the case for Arthur Dimmesdale in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel The Scarlet Letter. Arthur Dimmesdale is a weak individual because he is deserter when it comes to the Hester’s punishment, he is a coward at the governor's house, and he is a faker to his own daughter. Overall, Arthur Dimmesdale is the weakest character in this novel.
Dimmesdale is a deserter when it comes to Hester’s punishment. For example, at the scaffold when Hester is being forced to admit who the father is, and Dimmesdale, the father, is standing right next to her, he deserts her and lies to the crowd saying, “Wondrous strength and generosity of a woman’s heart! She will not speak!” (Hawthorne 63). At this moment, Dimmesdale could have admitted he was the father rather than having Hester have to go through the punishment and the embarrassment of keeping the identity of the father a secret. At this moment, …show more content…

When Hester is trying to convince the governor’s house, she turns to Dimmesdale to help convince the man because he knows her best because he is her pastor. For Hester says, “Thou wast my pastor, and hadst charge of my soul, and knowest me better than these men can [...]” (Hawthorne 104). When Hester says this, Dimmesdale could have used this opportunity to admit that he is the father of Pearl and say that he knows Hester even more because of their relationship. He also could have said that he does not want Pearl taken away because she is his child, too. During this scene at the governor’s house, Dimmesdale is seen as being a weak individual once

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