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Arthur Dimmesdale In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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Although Arthur Dimmesdale tries hiding his guilt, the townspeople openly revealed Hester Prynne’s, producing important differences between the two. As a result of disclosing what she did, Hester has learned how to live among contemptuous townspeople. However, Dimmesdale only learned how to live a guilty life of hiding, and as a result of the constant fear of the discovery of his secret, his “health had severely suffered” (Hawthorne, 101). Dimmesdale, who is a respectable model to the town, has difficulty revealing his secret: “He had told his hearers that he was altogether vile… Could there be any plainer speech than this?” (Hawthorne, 134). However, Hester is not in the least a reputable inhabitant, and so the townspeople more easily suspected

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