High Teen Interest Expository Essay Topics Related To Slavery And Slave Trade
Thursday, November 14, 2019
The Sin of Hypocrisy in Nathaniel Hawthornes The Scarlet Letter :: Scarlet Letter essays
The Sin of Hypocrisy in The Scarlet Letter       The Scarlet Letter by  Nathaniel Hawthorne is about the trials and   tribulations of Hester Prynne, a woman living in colonial Boston.Ã    Found   guilty of adultery,Ã   Hester's punishment is to wear a visible symbol of  her   sin: the scarlet letter "A."Ã   Through the book, the reader comes to  know   Hester, the adulteress; Dimmesdale, the holy man Hester had the affair   with; and Chillingworth, the estranged husband of Hester who is out for   revenge.Ã   The Scarlet Letter examines the interaction of these  characters   and the reaction of these characters to Hester's sin.Ã   However, the   greater sin that Hawthorne deals with in The Scarlet Letter is   hypocrisy.Ã   Hypocrisy is the practice of professing beliefs, feelings,  or   virtues that one does not hold or possess.Ã   All three main  characters,   Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth, commit the sin of hypocrisy.   Hawthorne shows that hypocrisy is indeed a sin by punishing the  offenders.     Hester Prynne is a strong, independent woman who deals with her sin of   adultery very well.Ã   Instead of running away from it, she lives with it  and   accepts her punishment.Ã   However, while succumbing to the will of the  court,   she does not for an instant truly believe that she sinned.Ã   Hester  thinks   that she has not committed adultery because in her mind she wasn't really   married to Chillingworth.Ã   Hester believes that marriage is only valid  when   there is love, and there is no love between Hester and Chillingworth.Ã    In   the prison, defending her actions against him, she declares, "Thou  knowest,   thou knowest that I was frank with thee.Ã   I felt no love, nor feigned  any"   (74). Then, later, speaking to Dimmesdale, Hester further imparts her   belief that she has not sinned, saying, "What we did had a consecration  of   its own.Ã   We felt it so" (192).Ã   Therefore, Hester, in her mind,  has not   committed a sin. The fact that she accepts the courts decision so meekly   and wears the scarlet letter denoting her as an adulteress is the first   way in which she is hypocritical.Ã   Hester, although she does not  believe   she has sinned, portrays herself as a sinner by wearing the scarlet  letter   without complaint.Ã   Over the ensuing years, Hester endures the shame  and   ridicule brought about by the scarlet letter.Ã   However, the true source  of     					    
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