The impact of sin in Dimmesdale's "Red Letter" is the manifestation of several different sins among many people, and the result and relief of their sins. Three main characters: Hester Prinh, pastor Arthur Dimszdale, Roger Chillingworth revealed most of these charges. But Arthur Dimmesdale could not bear the most cruel influence of this evil. This is due to several reasons. The most obvious reason for his final collapse is that he kept the secret.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Red Letter" is a novel full of character investigation and definition. Hawthorne tries to discover the effects of sin on human thought. Through Arthur Dimmesdale, Hawthorne is pursuing the effects of unrecognized sin on the mind and body. Obviously, by not acknowledging his adultery, Dimmesdale was involved in disease and depression, and he tried to remove it from time to time, but he never escaped. Arthur Dimmesdale started his novel with a feeling that he had to admit, despite his conscience, although his health was not affected at the outset. For Dimmesdale, one said, "It is very painful to think that such a scandal should happen to his congregation." In the early version of this novel, Dimmesdale camouflaged it and completed it. Everyone thinks he is very dissatisfied with Hester's behavior. Governor Bellingham fully touched Dimmesdale and asked him to help him clean out Hester
Nathaniel Hawthorne 's 1850 novel "Scarlet Letter" tells about the affair between the Massachusetts bay colonized Hester Pudding and the pastor Arthur Ding Mesdale in the 1640' s. . However, couple illegal women's pearls play the most important role in developing the novel's moral theme. Initially, pearls were physical incarnations of scarlet "A" that her mother had to wear as a symbol of her infidelity; the birth of pearl brought Hester's punishment, and her Early life reminded me of it. But upgrading pearls also helps to salvage and recover Hester. Born outside the laws of people and church, she knows the freedom that other children of the Puritan community can not imagine. She is happy, uncontrollable, unpredictable. At this point, the pearl represents the ideal of American transcendental movement led by Hawthorne.