Dimmesdale's Endings In The Scarlet Letter By Nathaniel Hawthorne

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Hawthorne could have written multiple other endings for the Scarlet Letter. He could have had Dimmesdale’s sin go unnoticed from the people and then write a tragic story that would take place in the boat they were to take to Europe or a marvelous story where Dimmesdale finally confronted his tempter in an epic battle. Hawthorne could have had Dimmesdale’s sin revealed to the public of New England, but not by his own will but by somebody else schemes like Chillingworth or Mistress Hibbins, who both knew the minister had been hiding something. He could have also had Dimmesdale's sin revealed, but the public reacting to this horrible truth in a more violent way, killing the last of the feeble spirit that remained in him, rather than remaining …show more content…

Dimmesdale’s sin could not have gone unnoticed because it was his last chance at redemption and at that doing what he was supposed to do 7 years earlier before he breathed his last. Dimmesdale’s sin could not be revealed by Chillingworth because then he would have the shame of being the husband they cheated on nor it could be revealed by Mistress Hibbins because she trusted that the Black Man was going to do it and if she would have said anything people would have thought it was because he was under a dark spell from the witch and so there would not be any veracity in his repentance. The public could not have reacted any other way, because Hawthorne wanted to state a critique to the Puritan way of life that everything did not have to be punishment but mercy could be given without changing the Puritan way of life. Hester could have not lost the scarlet letter from the place it was, because it establishes the conclusion to the theme of identity in the midst of social judgement, that just because someone else has decided the scarlet letter is shameful, it does not mean Hester has to deny it because it is still a part of her that she can show not as an example of sin, but of redemption. Therefore, Hawthorne is left with the only option of writing the ending the way he did, summing up everything. He ends with the claim that even in death

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