The Responsibility Of Hester Prynne In The Scarlet Letter By Nathaniel Hawthorne

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In the Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne reveals the responsibilities that derive from sin through Hester Prynne, who clearly embodies an individual’s willingness to sacrifice something that is deemed valuable to their character. By purposefully relinquishing her power over factors such as her dignity, freedom, and love, Hester illuminates her inner strength and respect by believing that identity and self-evaluation are superior to societal judgement. Hester Prynne, the wife of Roger Chillingworth, has an affair with Arthur Dimmesdale after Chillingworth is assumed to be lost at sea. Their relationship results in a daughter, Pearl. Hester bears this child as an unmarried woman and, as a result, she is marked with the scarlet letter “A” for adultery. She stands on a scaffold with her child in front of the entire town, subject to their ridicule and criticism. Meanwhile, the man who committed the sin of adultery with her remains unnamed and protected from social scorn. Dimmesdale is able to maintain his reputation in the town, as he was the …show more content…

“And my child must seek a Heavenly Father, she shall never know an earthly one!” “(54). Hester allows herself to be the town’s scapegoat to save the reputation of her lover and to protect her daughter to the extent that she can. Her willingness to protect those whom she loves, portrays her as loyal and respectful. After the public witnessing of Hester Prynne and her sin, she and her daughter are condemned by the town. They live secluded from the townspeople and are scolded and judged on a daily basis. By keeping Dimmesdale’s identity a secret, she gives up her undying love for him and her freedom, by accepting her punishment for the sin she

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