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Monday 18 February 2019
The Power of Secrets in The Scarlet Letter :: Scarlet Letter essays
The Power of Secrets in The Scarlet Letter             Deception is defined by Websters Dictionary as the art of misrepresentation.  Throughout the history of mankind, the use of thaumaturgy to promote oneself to a higher level, or to treat ones past, has been a roughhewn occurrence. In the novel The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne , Chillingworth and Dimmesdale both use misrepresentation to hide recondites  from each other, and from the rest of the town.             Hester Prynne is the only one who go to sleeps the secrets that Dimmesdale and Chillingworth are covert from the townsfolk.  Hester has to control her desire  to tell the truth and practices the art of deception  to hide these secrets.   When she impart not reveal  the father of Pearl,  Reverend Dimmesdale says, She will not speak.  It is  ironic that the person who committed the si n with Hester is the one who announces publicly  that she will not reveal the name of the other sinner.   Later, Chilling worth wants to jazz who it is and he says, Thou wilt not reveal his name?  Hester refuses and continues to compel her silence.  Then Chillingworth, still trying to find out the name of her rooter, comments, . . . just Hester, the man lives who has wronged us both Who is he?  When he says this, he is hinting that he is going to do something to Dimmesdale.  This is why Hester makes Chillingworth promise not to kill her lover if he finds out his identity.  Chillingworth deserves to know  who slept with his wife, although Hester should not deplete had to tell him.  I think that Dimmesdale should have admitted that he was Pearls father. Today, if a priest admitted such a  crime, he would probably be sent to jail. However, in the novel, had  Dimmesdale confessed, the  townsfolk would have liked him even more. Hester also has to live with, and conceal, the secret that the scholar, Chilling worth, is her husband.  When he comes to visit her in jail he says, Thou hast kept the secret of thy paramour.  Keep, likewise, mine  There are none in this land that know me. Breathe not, to any soul, that thou didst ever call me husband.
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