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Untitled Essay, Research Paper
Evil of Isolation
In the New Testament it states that “the wages of sin
is death.” Though the
penalty of sin in The Scarlet Letter is not a termination of life, the evil
of isolation can be
a physically, morally, and socially tortuous event in Puritan society. Hester
Prynne and
Arthur Dimmesdale, in Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, are both victims of
the cruel
isolation from Puritan society on the basis of their sins. Hester wears her
sin upon her
breast where it stands as a constant reminder of her malfeasance. Shame and
isolation
strip her of all passion and femininity, leaving her a shell of her former
self. Though
Arthur’s mark of shame is not visible, it is all the more tortuous for its
absence. Shame
and guilt feed upon Arthur’s soul with slow malevolency. Only a combination
of death
and confession finally release Arthur from his torture.
Though Hester’s ostracism from society and the tortuous
nature of her shame,
Hester is stripped of all passion and humanity. Since society acknowledges
Hester’s sin,
she becomes an exile in her own town. “All the world Ha[s] frowned on her,”
and Hester
must bear the brunt of her shameful isolation. When Hester walks through
her town “a
sort of magic circle [forms] itself around her.” Devoid of any social contact,
save that of
her daughter, Hester must endure of lonely existence. “In all her intercourse
with society,
save that of her daughter, there was nothing that made [Hester] feel as if
she belonged to
it.”; therefore, she turns to herself for reflection of her shame. When Hester
must walk
through the town, she suffers “an agony from every footstep.” Frequent suffering
does not
inure Hester to her inner torment; instead, the same grows” more sensitive
with daily
torture.” Hester’s ostracism from a stoic society and the burdensome nature
of her shame,
deprive her off life. Treated as a dangerous delinquent by society, Hester
begins to
question her humanity. Due to her intense suffering, “some attribute [departs]
from
[Hester], which had been essential to keep her a woman.” Stripped of her
passion and
femininity, Hester is left as an iron character with a solemn manner. Hester’s
shame
remains to haunt her until her dying day.
Reverend Dimmesdale’s bought with the evils of isolation
is distinct from Hester’s
due to the fact that his sin remains a secret from the public. Tormented
by his grievous
sin and the duplicity of a fraudulent lifestyle, Dimmesdale’s physical stature
is destroyed.
Arthur Dimmesdale is “a man burdened with a secret” that haunts his daily
existence.
The only truth that continues to give Arthur Dimmesdale a real existence
“was the
anguish in his inmost soul.” Arthur wears “his hand over his heart” an indication
of his
shame eating away at his soul. In addition to the torture Dimmesdale endures
from his
shame, he constantly suffers from the fraudulent duplicity of his lifestyle.
To his
congregation, Arthur wears a mask of purity, however, Arthur realizes the
blackness of
his sin in private. Dimmesdale endures a constant “bitterness and agony of
heart” from
the “contrast between what [he] seem[s] and what [he is]” Due to his multiple
lifestyles,
Dimmesdale is often “bewildered as to which may be true.” The sum of
Dimmesdale’s
torment is manifested in the form of a “bodily disease,” which serves to
deteriorate the
reverend. Dimmesdale is only able to find peace in death and confession.
Revealing his
sin to society, he frees himself to advance toward God’s judgment.
The evil of isolation of Puritan society robs Hester and
Dimmesdale of their
humanity, leaving them as stone monuments of shame. The isolation of Puritan
society is
a result of their belief that “the wages of sin is death.” Only in death
do Hester and
Dimmesdale escape the anguish that arises from isolation. However, the infancy
remains
as their “only monument” after death. The destructive nature of shame is
a powerful
weapon.