The moral tragedy of Ding Mesdale speaks to you explicitly, "Please do not commit adultery." This is due to several reasons. The most obvious reason for his final collapse is that he kept the secret. Arthur Ding Mesdale's crime is the same as Hester's sin and Arthur can not ignore the fraudulent view that he is a pure and sacred person through his own unpleasant behavior. they are.
The private evil and public morals in The Scarlet Letter of Nathaniel Hawthorne cause an internal conflict between Pastor Hester Prynne and the imagination of Dimmesdale. In general, Puritanism is not only positioned objectively like Hawthorne but also subjectively. Judgment of severe prejudice against his personality, or aggressiveness of moral teaching, but the quality of his own vision, the tone of his image
In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne explores the subject of sin and presents a new view of morality and sin. Through Hester Prynne's secret lover, Ding Mesdale Pastor's suffering, Hawthorne was found guilty of body, mind and spirit. Guilt makes the body vivid and exhausts its vitality. It erodes the heart, robs the individual's moral center and silences the gentle voice of God living in all of us. After all, it erodes the spirit, making us all hypocrites and cowards and hiding our secret shame even though we want to repent. But the most important cause of real sin is condemnation that we condemn.
Through the role of Arthur Dimmesdale, Nathaniel Hawthorne discusses his main idea for the audience to master "red letters", such as the effects of guilt on individuals, responsibility for personal behavior, personal and personal responsibility I will explain. Self-conflict. Among the "red letters", Hawthorne emphasizes the fall of Pastor Arthur Din Mezdale as a role and how criminal adultery affects him. The audience is primarily aware of the physical influence of the formation of guilty of Dimmesdale; "Ding Mesdale" is sad and puzzled and feels "pale" as usual ... in the eyes, he I am exhausted, exhausted.