Sunday, October 13, 2019
Arthur Dimmesdale and John Proctors Guilt and Sin Essay -- The Crucib
Arthur Dimmesdale and John Proctor's Guilt and Sin    Guilt is something that weighs heavily on the human soul. It  incorporates itself in our dreams, our thoughts, and our actions.  Everywhere we turn, it stares us blankly in the face. While it is  unbearable to suffer, guilt is an emotion that reaffirms our humanity.  Repentance of a particular guilt, being spiritual, physical or both,  is evidence that we are beyond the baseness of our animal tendencies.  This fact has not gone unnoticed to the many great figures of  literature. They have explored the sentiments of guilt and repentance  by exploiting the conscience of flawed characters. In The Scarlet  Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne presented to the world Reverend Arthur  Dimmesdale, a man suffering in a past sin. Likewise, in his play The  Crucible, the great modern playwright, Arthur Miller, penned the  character of John Proctor to allegorize the dangers of moral  passivity. Their guilt and repentance were the primary causes of their  ââ¬Å"undoingâ⬠.    Dimmesdale and Proctor were both martyrs to their sin. More  specifically, they were both martyrs to the sin of adultery. Being a  man of the cloth, this was especially painful for Dimmesdale. How  could ââ¬Å"a ruined soul like [his] effect toward the redemption of other  souls?â⬠ (Hawthorne 182). As he confessed so mournfully to Hester, his  partner in sin, ââ¬Å"Canst thou deem it, Hester, a consolation, that I  must stand up in my pulpit and meet so many eyes turned up to my as if  the light of heaven were beaming from itâ⬠¦and then look inward, and  discern the black reality of what they idolize?â⬠(Hawthorne 182). He  was so consumed by his hypocrisy that he turned to self-masochism as a  means of escape. In stark contrast to Hesterââ¬â¢s outward ...              ...eâ⬠(Miller 22). All he  wanted to do was get on with his farming and continue to live happily  with his wife. It was only when the witch hunt directly affected him  did he realize the gravity of his mistake. This was completely  different to Dimmesdaleââ¬â¢s seven long years of suffering. However,  unlike Dimmesdale, when faced with the decision to confess and live or  stand by his convictions and die, Proctorââ¬â¢s love for life interfered.  He had so much to live for including his children and his livelihood.  Only his honor steered him back to the importance of his cause.    Arthur Dimmesdale and John Proctor were both martyrs for personal and  societal guilt. They paid earthly penances and the final penance of  death. Their ââ¬Å"undoingâ⬠ was a necessity for a society at the brink.  Without their sacrifice, the society they lived in would have  collapsed under its own weight.                        
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