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Scarlet Letter


            One of the main topics of The Scarlet Letter was the guilt that Hester Prynne felt and repented for and the guilt that Arthur Dimmesdale felt and tortured himself with. Hester and Dimmesdale handled their guilt in different ways, Hester's way obviously be the better of the two. While Hester repented for and publicly showed her sin, Dimmesdale sought to keep his hidden and reveal it at the same time.
             When Hester first appears in the book, one gets the impression that she is haughty and doesn't care what people think of her or that she even wronged in the first place. While the former part somewhat holds true throughout the book, she does care that she committed adultery and accepts her penance for it. Often in the book she is shown to be a sad, miserable soul, and though she does have opportunity to change that, she never does because she knows what she did wrong and accepts, even embraces, her punishment. After a while people see that the punishment has had its effect, and try to put an end to it, but Hester does not allow that to happen. When people would thank her or try to greet her on the street she would not reply and just hang her head. If they were persistent to get a response out of her, she would "simply point to the A on her chest" and keep on walking. In fact, her punishment worked so well that many people of the town refused to interpret the letter as it's original meaning, instead saying that it meant Able. Even at the end of the book when Chillingworth and Dimmesdale die, she still wears the letter to remind herself of and learn from her sin. .
             When Pearl is first talked about in the book, she seems to be something of a spoiled brat. But Hester describes Pearl as her "only joy in life", that without Pearl she would die. Throughout the book one can see that this is true, even though Pearl is rather obnoxious at times. When the governor tries to take pearl away from Hester, she is all but in despair.


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