Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Free Essay - Rev. Arthur Dimmesdales Double-talk in The Scarlet Letter :: Scarlet Letter essays
      Dimmesdale's Double-talk in The Scarlet Letter                 Abstract: Critics of Nathaniel Hawthorne's 'The Scarlet Letter' are wrong to  attribute to Hester the means of persuading Dimmesdale to elope with her and  their child. It is Dimmesdale who uses his rhetorical mastery to talk Hester  into talking him into eloping. An analysis of his conversation with Hester in  the forest in comparison with his sermons shows that he is using the same  discursive strategy he employs to convince his parishioners that he is a sinless  man.            The Reverend Mister Arthur Dimmesdale is usually understood to be guilty of  two sins, one of commission (his adultery with Hester) and one of omission (his  cowardly and hypocritical failure to confess). This is his state through most of  The Scarlet Letter; but when Dimmesdale meets Hester in the forest (Chapters  16-19), he agrees to flee Boston with her, to seek out a new life in the Old  World, and, presumably, to live with her in adultery. By the lights of his  community and his profession, this resolution is a far more serious sin than any  he had committed to date, but most critics have agreed that Dimmesdale is not  primarily responsible for his actions in the forest. Both Michael Colacurcio and  Terence Martin have written that Hester "seduced" Dimmesdale in the forest,(2)  and Darrel Abel argues that "Dimmesdale could not resist Hester," for in  entering the forest "Hester means to persuade Dimmesdale to elope with her and  Pearl," and Dimmesdale agrees to the elopement "a   fter only a feeble show of  conscience."(3)            The forest scene is crucial in the narrative of The Scarlet Letter, and a  proper understanding of what happens in the forest is necessary for any  interpretation of Dimmesdale's last days of life and his final "confession." I  will argue in this paper that the reading of the forest scene sketched above is  mistaken; that in fact it is Arthur Dimmesdale and not Hester Prynne who is the  "activating agent"(4) in the forest, increasing Dimmesdale's culpability for his  most serious fall. Previous critics seem to think that Dimmesdale's much-vaunted  skill as a speaker abandons him when he enters the forest with Hester, but I  will show that Dimmesdale talks Hester into talking him into fleeing, and so  Dimmesdale's gravest sin cannot be laid at Hester's feet at all.  					    
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