Scarlet Letter Arthur Dimmesdale Quotes

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These quote from chapter twenty (The Minister in a Maze) offers a unique view into the minds of Arthur Dimmesdale. He is a young, pale, and physically delicate person.We get to know the young minister’s daily experiences and his thoughts about Hester, Pearl and the other characters who surround him. Hester is a young woman sent to the colonies by her husband, who plans to join her later but does not make it since they presume he is lost in the sea. Normally, one cannot serve two masters at a go since at the long run one of a person’s characters will oversee the other. In this essay herein, we are going to highlight the characters and actions of Dimmesdale and Hester in relation to the quote,"No man for any considerable period can wear …show more content…

This is after they committed the crime that led to their shame. We can tell that Hester would not have left the settlement before. She chose to continue wearing the scarlet and stays in the town for seven years. Her shame may have slowly faded away but the inner guilt surely could not have.
Dimmesdale is the “wretched minister!” who is tempted by his dream of happiness. This made him yield to what he well knew was a deadly sin. He is a man of faith and it was wrong for him to commit such a sin or leave the town for an evil pursuit. He feels he has dealt his puritan soul to the devil and this makes him have a guilty conscience. He starts changing character and even starts saying things a man of his status would not have said Arthur had been feeling weird since he proposed to Hester, seven years ago. It takes him a completely new light to start feeling free.
At the end of the figurative maze, both characters, in a way, regret their decisions. They both question their decisions and actions. Dimmesdale is convinced that the dream he had so much wanted to pursue was just a temptation by the devil. He feels he was supposed to remain in the town and pursue his job instead of moving

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