Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Covid-19 Update


Individuals today, across the world, find themselves amid a globally disruptive event, the Covid-19 pandemic.  Global markets are experiencing extreme volatility, jobs are at risk, and lifestyles derailed by fear and uncertainty in the face of a disease that has hit the world like a tsunami. 
As institutions struggle to calculate and adjust to the potential costs and dangers arising from this extreme disruption, individuals wrestle with the practical and existential implications of social distancing and lock downs, while limiting themselves to essential functions.  The initial absence of a strong and centralized Federal response to the Corona virus led to disparate bottom-up responses to the dynamically unfolding climate of social distancing, consumer hoarding, and a general climate of discomfort and withdrawal.  Private and public institutions have made coordinated efforts to flatten the curve and health providers around the world are working around the clock to respond to this evolving crisis.
Personally, I have admired the attentiveness and responsiveness of local businesses in the face of this pandemic.  My sympathy is with them; I know that small and mid-sized businesses are really suffering right now.  How can we balance the need to curtail the spread of this infectious disease without undermining the systems that hold our society together?  One thing is for sure: there is no simple way to navigate this climate.
Right now, we are all out of our comfort zones.  We are glued to our screens watching heat maps of the virus’ spread; checking other countries’ reactions to prepare for our own.  The climate changes day to day and uncertainty fills the air.  Meanwhile, we find ourselves on the backfoot as new restrictions (e.g. curfews) are announced every day; who can say what tomorrow will bring?  Time will tell.  Certainly, we will learn a lot from this unique episode in human history.  The Corona virus has made us acutely aware of the unpredictable nature of our little global community.  From this humbling experience, I draw the conclusion that, despite “social distancing”, we are all much closer to each other than we realize.
I would like to offer a sort of listicle of practical advice for this time of disruption.  How can we balance healthy fear while mitigating inevitable feelings of panic and dread?  How can we remain mentally fleet footed while physically locked-in?
1.       Educate yourself.  We are being inundated by information as our inboxes are flooded, while social media and internet browsing overwhelm us with novel suggestions.  In the face of such an overwhelming quantity of data, we must prioritize quality (e.g. information from the CDC).  At the institutional level, I recommend Michael Bang-Petersen’s article on the need to express unpleasant truths and “necessary precautions and clear communication about why these precautions are necessary to motivate people to follow the advice.” Click here to see the original article. 
2.       Engage responsibly.  People are using virtual interfaces like Zoom and FaceTime to overcome the hurdle of social distance.  See guidance from the APA here.
3.       Support small businesses.  Personally, I feel comforted by supporting local restaurants as they strive to adapt by providing curbside or traditional delivery services.  I am very grateful for their efforts and sacrifices and know that remembering to support my favorite restaurants is a great way to improve my mood.
4.       Do it yourself: Hopefully, we all emerge from this as better home cooks.  Finding ways to create delicious and healthy meals is a great way to take things into your own hands.  Cooking for yourself is most comforting when it is done with attention and care.  It is worth putting in your best effort even if you don’t have guests.  And you can always show off on Instagram. Studies have shown that everyday creativity can have important mental health benefits.
5.       A time for art?  Listen to music; visit the websites of museums or Google Arts and Culture; try your own hand at drawing or start a journal.  These are all great ways of keeping yourself stimulated and refreshed. Our time is worth what we make of it. 
6.       The positive side of disruption.  Disruption is the counterpart of change.  Many people have used the Covid-19 pandemic as an opportunity for reflection over essential aspects of their lives.  It is easier to be critical than correct and even harder to make long-lasting changes to our lives against the gravity of habit.  Disruption provides perspective and opportunity, not just uncertainty and displacement.

We can take advantage of the suboptimal situation by optimizing our environment to fit our needs. It is an opportune time for cleaning, reorganizing, and enhancing the beauty of our domestic spaces, in addition to stocking up on necessities and small pleasures of life.  Ask Marie Kondo!

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Un Hombre Libre en Cuba



In April 2013, the story of Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s trip to Cuba was all over the news.  They had received a hard-to-get visa that permitted them to visit our controversial island neighbor (you know, the one with the missile crisis).  President Obama was taking heat for giving them special privileges and maybe the absurdity of this situation contributed to his subsequent decision to restore U.S. diplomatic relations with Cuba and try to usher in a milder stance towards our isolated neighbor.  Regardless, I was there first. 

I visited Cuba using a person-to-person exchange visa obtained for me by Washington University.  I was part of a trip led by my friend and mentor, Professor Schraibman (Pepe). Pepe had grown up in Old Havana, where a vibrant Jewish community used to exist.  This community essentially vanished after the Revolution, as Jews had been on the wrong side of too many revolutions and had learned to leave while one could under such circumstances.  Still, Havana was Pepe’s home and he returned each year with supplies and medicine for the people of Havana and a group of lucky, young students in tow.  The people of Havana loved Pepe and their love was returned in this case.

Many in the United States maintain a romantic conception of Havana.  In pictures, we see brightly colored cars and historic Spanish-colonial style buildings.  Perhaps, you are familiar with the vibrant music of the Buena Vista Social Club?  It has a passionate, languorous sound.  Voices, jangling guitars, maracas, drums, and horns interweave into an oceanic ebb and flow.  This music could only have come from Cuba and the unique fusion of cultures that fertilized it.  Yet, such “social clubs” were abolished in the aftermath of the Revolution.  In a famous speech, Fidel Castro spelled out the future of art in Cuba: “The Revolution must have an attitude for…the intellectuals and writers…within the Revolution, everything goes; against the Revolution, nothing.” One did not need to crack a book to see that the Revolution had left little in Cuba untouched.  The streets were silent and the war was over but the Revolution lived on and it held its children in a suffocating embrace that left them gasping for air.  The machinations of the Revolution had been sustained by the lives and dreams of its people, which it fed upon in the name of the People. Against the Revolution, nothing.  What remained beyond the Revolution?  The vast and empty sea. A sea that imprisoned a people who had been assigned the motto, “Homeland or Death!”  And beyond that?  Everything.

In Havana, time could have been measured against the crumbling of pre-Revolutionary buildings.  I walked through a city that was falling apart around me.  A city of the condemned living on an island without boats.  The beautiful ocean that encircled Cuba was like a moat that stretched as far as the eye could see and there was not a single boat within sight.  The people of Cuba were overjoyed to find United States citizens on their island.  They had been waiting in vain for recognition from their powerful neighbor.  They were stuck in limbo, living as hostages of a sovereign feud and our arrival was interpreted as a good omen. 

The strong attraction that Cubans felt towards foreigners was, however, a product of their two-currency system.  Cuban citizens were paid in pesos for their government assigned work, a currency that was worth next to nothing and was highly illiquid, analogous to food stamps, perhaps.  Everything other than the bare essentials had to be paid for with CUCs, a currency that was pegged to the dollar at a rate of 1.0 USD to 0.8 CUC. The 20% premium was arbitrarily established by the Cuban government as an off-the-top collection.  For foreigners like myself, this currency was like a token system at an arcade.  There was no changing your money back, while for Cubans, there was no playing without it.  Within the Revolution, everything goes.

Without direct access to dollars or CUCs, the only other means of getting hard-to-find items (what we would consider everyday items) was to be lucky enough to have a kind relative overseas who was willing to send care packages back to Cuba.  The end of the embargo was sought with a religious fervor and many Cubans felt that their problems would be diminished substantially by the return of more Americans.  Accordingly, we were treated like royalty, which made me very uncomfortable.  Once, I saw some bracelets on display and wanted to get one for my wife but there was no attendant.  I stumbled into the home of an unrelated family, yet they wanted me to sit down and showed me the utmost hospitality. 

Most of the buildings in Havana were constructed in a Spanish-colonial style and many were built during the prohibition when Havana was viewed as an island escape for U.S. tourists seeking booze, gambling, and the magic of a truly unique city.  In cities like Rome, I have seen beautiful ruins encircled by new developments and streets filled with modern continental cars. In Cuba, there were only the latter; people lived amongst the ruins of the past─ their homes were literally crumbling around them. The city was very open because there was no privacy.  People lived in close quarters.  Walls had eroded, leaving cracks that allowed families to peer into each other’s living rooms.  I was told that the government had been slowly working on renovating these buildings but it was obvious that they were past salvation.  I wondered how often they collapsed on their inhabitants, crushing the people that they were meant to protect.  I was sure such incidents would not have been published in the Cuban press.  There were no tragedies in Cuba other than those of a counter-revolutionary nature.

Society was so dysfunctional at the macro level that, at the micro level, life had to be held together through relentless collaboration and small acts of kindness and genius. The brightly colored vintage cars that are admired in photographs around the world were perpetually being worked on in the street.  Their continued use did not stem from nostalgia but from necessity, which is the mother of invention and, in Cuba, a culture of MacGyver-like ingenuity. The Cuban populace seemed to entertain few illusions about the quality of the leadership in their country, which presented far more obstacles than solutions; their joy was a product of their overcoming of these obstacles on a daily basis, of their will to live and find meaning in spite of all of the absurdity. 

During my last day in Cuba, I remember walking along the Malecon towards the Hotel Nacional de Cuba where many celebrities and mobsters had gone to enjoy themselves.  As I strolled beside the sea wall, waves crashed against it and broke over the side, rising above and then crashing down on me.  By the time, I arrived at my destination, I was soaked but happy.  I walked in dripping wet and enjoyed a first-class daquiri. This was a world that Cubans did not get to experience.  An island within an island.  It had become clear to me that the Cuban people were exiles within their own country.  Everyone that I spoke to hoped that relations between the U.S. and Cuba would thaw out and return to a more sensible state.  Although I was traveling within a totalitarian state, I had arrived there as a free man, had traveled throughout as such, and would return to a country of unparalleled opportunity and freedom.  What about the people of Cuba?  Had their Revolution served them?  Would it ever end?  They were still waiting…  As Vasilly Grossman wrote, “Man’s innate yearning for freedom can be suppressed but never destroyed. Totalitarianism cannot renounce violence. If it does, it perishes. Eternal, ceaseless violence, overt or covert, is the basis of totalitarianism. Man does not renounce freedom voluntarily. This conclusion holds out hope for our time, hope for the future.”  The many friends that I made in Cuba lived their lives clawing at the walls but with dignity and pride.  They were resilient in spite of everything but, as we drank warm mojitos in the sun, they told me to bring back a message for them.  They said that they were ready for freedom, they wished for renewed friendship with the United States, and they prayed for the day when boats would grace their marinas and planes would arrive on their airfields which they too could board. 



My Handwriting


My handwriting is unruly and frantic.  It crowds itself as it rushes towards the end of the line.  The congestion tightens as it closes in on this precipice and the last words begin to slip over the edge like a herd of buffalo until they are magically transported suddenly to another line like Pac Man. 
When I take notes during meetings or class, it scampers after the speaker like a small dog.  It chases spastically and only catches up during lulls.  Inevitably, it falls behind and, like a child breaking into a sprint to reintegrate himself after straggling, moves into a bizarre shorthand and makes a break for it.
When I write in solitude, I sometimes take the time to try and “pretty-up” my writing.  I am deliberate and careful and then my writing starts to smooth and spread out.  The words have room to breathe and they take advantage of this rare opportunity to stretch, like a man on a transcontinental flight getting up to move around the cabin while he waits for his seatmate to return from the bathroom.  Most of the time, however, they will remain in cramped quarters, piling over each other.
About a year ago, I allowed myself a spree of indulgence.  I got one fountain pen and then another and another.  It was a sort of “if-you-build-it-they-will-come” moment.  In other words, I figured that I would grow into them.  The child who physical therapists had tried desperately to train to write properly with such novel devices as vibrating pens was ready to strut his stuff.  I loved the fancy nibs and beautiful colors.  Now I chose from colors that burst onto the page overripe, like piles of blueberries, bunches of grapes, or sprigs of eucalyptus.  Even the black inks had a special appeal.  They were a purer, deeper blackthat Motherwell hue that just sucks you in. 
Oddly enough, my writing did improve.  I was more conscious of my hand’s movements and the pens were more finnicky; they required some babying.  You see, I liked the flex pens, the ones that create those fun swoops on the downstrokes.  If you press too hard though, they will “railroad,” the nib parts like the Red Sea, leaving an uncannily dry path between two streams of color, an unnatural cleft.  This added flexibility required new restraint, which came to me intuitively out of necessity.  Suddenly, my hand was moving like a dancerlightly, softly...  And the pen moved like an ideal partner, always anticipating, responsive to the slightest suggestion.  Together, they slid and danced across the page like figure skaters, taking pride in their sweeping pirouettes, never missing a chance to celebrate their union.
The critic within me, however, looked down on this dance from above, peering like a disappointed parent at their prodigal child.  Now, I watched this extension of myself prancing across the page with great gusto but lacking the requisite adroitness to justify a stage presence.  Whipping its partner around like a mop, my hand spent itself overreaching; its movements lacked the economy of grace.  Well, I couldn’t blame the partner, a splendid tool with cat-like reflexes. 
How many hobbies had we been through, my hand and I?  How often had we arrived at them over-equipped and under-prepared?  But look at them dance, I thought; they are having such fun!  My prodigal child had lost his self-consciousness and had forgotten himself in those sweeping movements.  I descended from my critical perch to meet and congratulate them.  This young aspiring dancer was, after all, a part of me.

The Man of Sorrows: Ishmael and Melville’s Misericord



The Man of Sorrows: Ishmael and Melville’s Misericord
He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will also gaze into thee.
-Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil
The autonomous individual does not treat his own conclusions and decisions as authoritative but chooses with his eyes open, and then keeps his eyes open.  He has the courage to admit that he may have been wrong even about matters of the greatest importance.
-Walter Kaufmann, Without Guilt and Justice

            This paper will examine Melville’s democratic tragedy as a call for fellow feeling in the face of man’s insuperable longing for wholeness and universal suffering (Milder 23). Specifically, I will examine Moby-Dick in relation to the concept of misericord: a unique form of sympathy, associated with heartfelt commiseration, as well as mercy, compassion, pity, and charity.  “In the teachings of the Christian churches, charity was a religious emotion, a divine fire that destroyed the love of self to make room for the love of God and neighbors. Closely related to charity or caritas was mercy or misericordia” (Pullan 447). Tragic insight into the absence of divine sympathy, fills man’s heart with sorrow, misericord; he is bound to his shipmates, his brethren, not from the depth of his intellect, but by the strength of his spine and the depth of his sympathies. Inspired by Shakespeare, Melville created Ishmael, his pilot-prophet of the democratic man, and Ahab, his tragic hero in the manner of an Old Testament king.  Together with the crew of the Pequod, they harvest the purest fuel for illumination (spermaceti oil) from “the dark side of earth,” rather than “the theoretic bright one” which Emerson described in the Over-Soul (Melville 467).  From the depths of his sorrow, Ishmael calls the reader onwards.  Ishmael’s emphasis on the universal brotherhood of mankind should not be attributed to the ideals of man, but to the ordeals of man. Ahab’s quest to pierce the “ungraspable phantom of life” leads him to forsake the warmth of human sympathy in search of divine recognition but his labyrinthine hunt for the white whale ends in an abysmal downward vortex that swallows all but Ishmael.  Like the rest of the crew, Ishmael joined with Ahab in his Promethean rebellion.  Yet, while Ahab, like Prometheus, is bound in fatal agony to his tormentor, Ishmael is unbound and castaway. 
Ishmael finds his salvation in a coffin and, like Lazarus, rises from the ashes of the Pequod’s fatal collision with the walls of Fate. Man cannot “strike through the mask” of illusion; “the prisoner” cannot “reach…through the wall” (Melville 145). Yet perhaps another passage to freedom remains, that of the “Pagan leopards—the unrecking and unworshipping things, that live; and seek, and give no reasons for the torrid life they feel!” (Melville 146). Their sympathy is for themselves and their brethren and against the chaos that looms in the inscrutable depths of nature and lurks even in the familiar.  The pull of celestial white becomes siren-like; drawing man lee-ward only to bash him against the rocks.  Thus “the incantation of this whiteness… is at once the most meaning symbol of spiritual things, nay, the very veil of the Christian’s Deity; and yet should be as it is, the intensifying agent in things the most appalling to mankind” (Melville 175). To Ahab, the white whale becomes inhumanity and chaos personified, and in doing battle with it, he becomes a sort of Anti-Christ, who seeks satisfaction, not through prayer, but through defiance.  In “The Whiteness of the Whale” Ishmael senses that all “stately or lovely emblazoning… are but subtile deceits, not actually inherent in substances, but only laid on from without; so that all deified Nature absolutely paints like the harlot, whose allurements cover nothing but the charnel-house within” (Melville 175). Ishmael’s direct experience with the tragic undrside of man’s Romantic illusion of divinity, only serves to bring man to his knees. Ishmael’s renaissance is a felix culpa; his salvation is disillusion. 
Ishmael assumes the responsibility of a modern Moses, who leads his tribe from the torture of fire worship to the worship of “visible truth.”  Ishmael asks the reader: “Why then do you try to “enlarge” your mind? Subtilize it.”  Similarly, in “Extracts,” Ishmael, surveying the expansive references at the beginning of the book, compiled by the “Sub-Sub-Librarian,” sends the reader off.
Thou belongest to that hopeless, sallow tribe which no wine of this world will ever warm…—Give it up, Sub-Subs! For by how much the more pains ye take to please the world, by so much the more shall ye for ever go thankless!… But gulp down your tears and hie aloft to the royal-mast with your hearts; for your friends who have gone before are clearing out the seven-storied heavens, and making refugees of long-pampered Gabriel, Michael, and Raphael, against your coming. Here ye strike but splintered hearts together—there, ye shall strike unsplinterable glasses!
In this manner, Ishmael comes to embody the vocation of “pilot-prophet, or speaker of true things” “who acknowledges no law or lord, but the Lord his God, and is only a patriot to heaven” (Melville 42-3). In a similar fashion, Melville asserted that “With no son of man do I stand upon any etiquette or ceremony, except the Christian ones of charity and honesty” (Melville 511).  According to the Encyclopedia of European Social History:
In the teachings of the Christian churches, charity was a religious emotion, a divine fire that destroyed the love of self to make room for the love of God and neighbors…Christ and to find him in deprived and afflicted people and in wanderers, pilgrims, galley slaves, and the inmates of jails (Pullan 447).
Current usage of this word relates predominately to “A shelving projection on the underside of a hinged seat in a choir stall which, when turned up, gave support to a person standing in the stall” (OED).  Other historical meanings include:
 “a “larger measure of wine” given to a sick monk, to the short dagger or “sharp, straight, double-edged poignard that is called a misericord” (Bacchelli), used to “finish off” a wounded or dying enemy…  But above all, the term was and is used to indicate the instruments of first aid to the sick or wounded… and the pious associations and confraternities that …centred on the works of mercy: burial of the dead, succour of the poor and sick, charitable works towards widows, orphans and these in Prison. Even the bell that summoned the members of the Compagnia in emergencies was also – by metonymy – called a misericord (Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages)”
The phrase misericord seems conducive to an analysis of Melville’s conception of charity for many of these reasons, especially its special relation to orphans.
In “Monkey-Rope,” Ishmael alludes to an “interregnum in Providence; for… even-handed equity never could have sanctioned so gross an injustice” (Melville 287).  Here he is speaking of the risk that man poses to his fellow man; one man’s accident could be the death of an innocent interconnected individual.  While Ishmael senses injustice, Queequeg takes action and demonstrates an instinctual sympathy for the suffering of others.  Twice, he saves men from the deeps while others stand and watch self-consciously.  On the first occasion, he saves the life of a man who had just insulted him and whom he had just pummeled with the rear-end of his harpoon.  Yet, while Queequeg is proud, he is not vengeful.  When the same sailor is swept overboard, he dives in after him and brings him back safely to land.  Upon witnessing this authentic act of misericord, Ishmael exclaims:
Was there ever such unconsciousness? He did not seem to think that he at all deserved a medal from the Humane and Magnanimous Societies. He only asked for water—fresh water—something to wipe the brine off; that done, he put on dry clothes, lighted his pipe, and leaning against the bulwarks, and mildly eyeing those around him, seemed to be saying to himself—“It’s a mutual, joint-stock world, in all meridians. We cannibals must help these Christians (Melville 54).
Here we find Ishmael juxtaposing Queequeg, the Christ-like cannibal, against the virtue-signalling of urbane societies of misericord (fraternal charitable institutions) and finding the latter to be wanting in relation.  As Ishmael joked, I’ll try a pagan friend, thought I, since Christian kindness has proved but hollow courtesy” (Melville 45).
The readiness with which Queequeg accepts Ishmael demonstrates the depth of his sympathy, while the cannibal’s insistence upon splitting his prior earnings with Ishmael shows him to be closer to Christ than any Christian we encounter in the book.  In contrast to Queequeg , Ishmael marvels at “The urbane activity with which a man receives money is really marvellous, considering that we so earnestly believe money to be the root of all earthly ills, and that on no account can a monied man enter heaven. Ah! how cheerfully we consign ourselves to perdition!”  In emphasizing Queequeg’s superior moral character, Ishmael venerates the cannibal alongside (or above) the Christian. Ishmael’s emphasis of Queequeg’s humanities may have a precedent in the Calvinist concept of misericord.  In his book, Sympathetic Puritans: Calvinist Fellow Feeling in Early New England, Abram van Engen emphasizes
Calvin’s sense that sympathy arises from human nature and extends to all.  In fact, Calvin believes that even fallen, unredeemed human nature tends to melt at the suffering of others─a sentiment he often expresses with words like ‘misericord’ (mercy), ‘condolescere’ (condolences), and ‘humanitas’ (humanity)…Here, sympathy means being affected by the misery of another, and Calvin thought such a response fundamental to being human (Van Engen 35).
Calvin viewed misericord as an inherently human affect but his his highest conception of sympathy, love of the brethren, was reserved for those united in the body of Christ.  Man finds himself amidst an “interregnum in Providence” (Melville 287), man must serves as his brother’s keeper.
I would like to propose that Melville’s misericord exists in the absence of divine sympathy and inverts this hierarchy by equating misericord and love of the brethren.  As Richard Broadhead writes, “By positing a lowest common denominator of human identity he makes the stranger just like himself; by reversing his preconceived definitions of civilized and savage he makes the cannibal not only acceptable but actually desirable as a companion” (Broadhead 136).  This form of fellow feeling is forged in the depths of the sorrowful heart of a man who has “survived himself,” that is, overcome egocentrism through tragedy.  Such a man becomes a kind of pilot-prophet with “doubts of all things earthly, and intuitions of some things heavenly”; “neither believer nor infidel, but…a man who regards them both with equal eye” (Melville 335).  Like his prodigal son, Ishmael, Melville stated, in a letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne, that
a thief in jail is as honorable a personage as Gen. George Washington. This is ludicrous. But Truth is the silliest thing under the sun. Try to get a living by the Truth -- and go to the Soup Societies. Heavens! Let any clergyman try to preach the Truth from its very stronghold, the pulpit, and they would ride him out of his church on his own pulpit bannister” (Melville 335).
Melville’s sense of equality is derived in opposition to Emerson’s transcendental concept of self-reliance.   Similarly, Milder notes that “compassion for others, as much as loftiness in oneself, was for Melville the very mark and measure of the tragic vision” (Milder 65). 
Melville expressed this sentiment in another letter to Hawthorne of his letters to Hawthorne. “Let us speak, though we show all our faults and weaknesses—for it is a sign of strength to be weak, to know it, and out with it—not in [a] set way and ostentatiously, though, but incidentally and without premeditation” (Melville 514). Whereas, Emerson’s equates man’s highest instinct to Reason, separating spiritual awareness from empiricism, Melville elevates authentic and unconscious misericord.  It is from the depths of their sympathy that men draw their strength and “in those men who have fine brains and work them well, the heart extends down to hams. And though you smoke them with the fire of tribulation, yet, like veritable hams, the head only gives the richer and the better flavor. I stand for the heart. To the dogs with the head! I had rather be a fool with a heart, than Jupiter Olympus with his head” (Melville 512).  As Milder writes: “Not only was love "compatible with universal wisdom," as Emerson wrote in his own essay on Shakespeare, it was the natural consequence of wisdom, and wisdom the precondition for the highest love. And both of these things emanated from sorrow. Thus the tenderness and sympathy in Hawthorne's work could furnish "clews" for Melville of an "intricate, profound heart" deeply touched by suffering, for only "this only can enable a man to depict it in others" (Milder 65).  Herein lies the essence of Melville’s Hawthorne and his Mosses. 
Melville’s sense of “shared victimhood” is the axis upon which his ethics and metaphysics turn.  What makes the whiteness of the whale so terrifying is its inscrutability.  The question becomes, not necessarily whether or not there is a God, but as Goethe writes, “What is Praedestinatio? Answer: God is more powerful and wiser than we are; therefore he deals with us as he pleases.”  So what is man to do with himself? Milder argues,
The basis for egalitarian brotherhood in "Hawthorne and His Mosses" is not "humility before God," as F O. Matthiessen claimed of Melville…; it is vulnerability before apparent godlessness. Ontologically, democracy rests on what Melville called "the tragicalness of human thought in its own unbiassed, native and profounder workings"…From this it draws the ethical and political corollary that a shared victimhood communalizes us beyond differences of wealth, class, race, gender, education, and taste (Milder 66).
Hawthorne and Melville seemed to share a perception of the self-reliant individual as a potentially dangerous narcissist who could easily perceive a “dark necessity” behind their manipulative and self-centered actions.  Both writers seemed to find the cure to the malady of egotism in the same heart it consumes: the ideal individual is tempered by sympathy.  This can be seen most clearly in Hawthorne’s story The Minotaur. 
Hawthorne describes Theseus wandering through the labyrinth guided by Ariadne’s sympathy: “He would have left quite lost, and utterly hopeless of ever again walking in a straight path, if, every little while, he had not been conscious of a gentle twitch at the silken cord. Then he knew that the tender-hearted Ariadne was… giving him just as much of her sympathy as if she were close by his side. O, indeed, I can assure you, there was a vast deal of human sympathy running along that slender thread of silk.” The Scarlet Letter, shares Mapple’s preoccupation with truth and authenticity, as well as infidelity and egotism.  In both cases, we are admonished to be True and shown that there are consequences for naïve hubris.  Father Mapple proclaims:
Woe to that pilot of the living God who slights it. Woe to him whom this world charms from Gospel duty! Woe to him who seeks to pour oil upon the waters when God has brewed them into a gale! Woe to him who seeks to please rather than to appal! Woe to him whose good name is more to him than goodness! Woe to him who, in this world, courts not dishonor! Woe to him who would not be true, even though to be false were salvation! Yea, woe to him who, as the great Pilot Paul has it, while preaching to others is himself a castaway!’ (Melville 42-3).
Both Arthur and Jonah shrink from perceived moral necessity when it seems to compel them to face some primal terror, which in both cases, delivering “mortally intolerable truths” to an angry mob.  Although they are charged with the duty of proclaiming God’s truth, they shrink from their responsibility due to fear of their fellow man.  Whether through weakness or hubris, they slip into egocentrism and seek to flee instead.  “Bidden by the Lord to sound those unwelcome truths in the ears of a wicked Nineveh, Jonah, appalled at the hostility he should raise, fled from his mission, and sought to escape his duty and his God by taking ship at Joppa. But God is everywhere; Tarshish he never reached” (Melville 42). Similarly, Arthur is compelled to confront the sanctified with the unwelcome truth of his wickedness, yet he too is “appalled at the hostility it should raise” and “fled from his mission” to the forest, where he “sought to escape his duty” by fleeing via ship with Hester and Pearl. 
This emancipated individual would be a non-conformist and a free-thinker but their egotism would be checked by their commitment to truth and sympathy. As Father Mapple preached, “Delight is to him—a far, far upward, and inward delight—who against the proud gods and commodores of this earth, ever stands forth his own inexorable self.”  At the same time, Melville illustrates how Transcendental worship of the sun, only increases the gulf between the ideal and the actual.  The transcendental ideal fails its hypothetical test and Ishmael must “make a life-buoy of the coffin” and return to tell the tale (Melville 464). The “universal thump” is the cost of membership in society, as each man must wear a “monkey-rope,” but it is, at the same time, your only hope of getting your “shoulder-blades” rubbed.  The universal thump is the tragic aspect of man’s condition, but it also serves as a thread of sympathy which conjoins all individuals, whether they recognize it or not. 
The mingled, mingling threads of life are woven by warp and woof; calms crossed by storms, a storm for every calm. There is no steady unretracing progress in this life; we do not advance through fixed gradations, and at the last one pause:— through infancy’s unconscious spell, boyhood’s thoughtless faith, adolescence’ doubt (the common doom), then scepticism, then disbelief, resting at last in manhood’s pondering repose of If. But once gone through, we trace the round again; and are infants, boys, and men, and Ifs eternally (Melville 437).
It seems that the riddle of the Oedipal Sphynx, is man’s permanent condition (Milder 23). 
Ishmael returns to land with a “free and easy sort of genial, desperado philosophy” but, nevertheless, we find him still cycling between land and sea by at the mercy of his hypos like Bulkington, who had fallen from the prow to a watery death.  Ishmael invokes a Stoic resolve in the face of inevitable death, having already faced its direct prospect.  “Besides, all the days I should now live would be as good as the days that Lazarus lived after his resurrection; a supplementary clean gain of so many months or weeks as the case may be. I survived myself; my death and burial were locked up in my chest” (Melville 205).  Ishmael’s renaissance, however, merely prepares him for another “cool, collected dive at death and destruction” (Melville 205). The Pequod’s Promethean quest finds man orphaned but not without light. Ishmael points out that society is a joint stock venture. The example of Ishmael’s friendship with Queequeg shows him to be a man who can overcome prejudice through fellow feeling and an appreciation for subtle truths.  The personage of Queequeg shows that ‘moral refinement’ seems to have resulted in a loss of essential humanity. 
F.O. Matthiessen likens Ahab’s fatal pride to Lear’s and argues that Melville’s emphasis on Fate was partially attributable to the residue of Puritanism and partly driven by his skepticism regarding Emersonianism and points to Ahab’s tragedy is a “fearful symbol” of the tragic consequences of “self-enclosed individualism” or egotism (Matthiessen 455-9). Matthiessen wrote, “A concentrated view of Ahab will disclose that he was born from the matrix of Melville’s age. He is an embodiment of his author’s most profound response to the problem of the free individual will in extremis, Melville’s first detailed characterization of him stresses his apartness and his suffering, his ‘infinity of firmest fortitude,’ and yet the ‘crucifixion in his face.’ (Matthiessen 447-448). Mapple’s sermon, on the other hand, defines the pilot-prophet’s mission in terms of self-overcoming: “all the things that God would have us do are hard for us to do—remember that—and hence, he oftener commands us than endeavors to persuade. And if we obey God, we must disobey ourselves; and it is in this disobeying ourselves, wherein the hardness of obeying God consists.” (Melville 37).  Here, we might perceive the influence of Nathaniel Hawthorne, to whom Melville dedicated the book. 
Matthiessen may overstate the significance of Puritan’s influence on Melville but it seems to have been one of many factors that influenced his conception of evil (Milder 23).  Milder sees a pattern of discontent in Melville’s work and argues that
Whatever the literary mode and degree of authorial distance, the underlying attitudes were bitterness toward God for his detachment from history and a visceral indignation at the callousness of human beings. ‘We talk of the Turks, and abhor cannibals,’ Redburn says, but may not some of them, go to heaven, before some of us?  We may have civilized bodies and yet barbarous souls.  We are blind to the real sights of the world; deaf to its voice; and dead to its dead.  And not till we know, that one grief outweighs ten thousand joys, will we become what Christianity is striving to make us” (Milder 24-5). 
Melville elevates moral feeling over moral norms, fidelity over familiarity, and common humanity over civilization.  Above all else, however, Melville emphasizes the importance misericord.  In a letter to Hawthorne, Melville wrote “that mortal man who hath more of joy than sorrow in him, that mortal man cannot be true—not true, or undeveloped. With books the same. The truest of all men was the Man of Sorrows, and the truest of all books is Solomon’s, and Ecclesiastes is the fine hammered steel of woe. ‘All is vanity.’ ALL.” (Melville 380).  In this passage, Melville explicitly correlates fidelity and virtue with a sorrowful heart.  Conversely, he emphasizes that a joyful temperament is evidence of a mortification related to an excess of egocentrism.    In his essay Circles, Emerson wrote that “We all stand waiting, empty, — knowing, possibly, that we can be full…Then cometh the god, and converts the statues into fiery men, and by a flash of his eye burns up the veil which shrouded all things.”  Ahab believes that he may be that god.  He perceives that “all visible objects” are but as pasteboard masks” and he becomes unable to tolerate their inscrutability. In his defiant spirit, he is possessed by an unquenchable desire to, as Emerson wrote, “burn up the veil which shrouded all things.”  He devotes himself completely to his desire for vengeance believing that in
the living act, the undoubted deed—there, some unknown but still reasoning thing puts forth the mouldings of its features from behind the unreasoning mask. If man will strike, strike through the mask! How can the prisoner reach outside except by thrusting through the wall? To me, the white whale is that wall, shoved near to me. Sometimes I think there’s naught beyond. But ‘tis enough. He tasks me; he heaps me; I see in him outrageous strength, with an inscrutable malice sinewing it. That inscrutable thing is chiefly what I hate; and be the white whale agent, or be the white whale principal, I will wreak that hate upon him. Talk not to me of blasphemy, man; I’d strike the sun if it insulted me (Melville 145).
Hawthorne might as well have been describing Ahab, when he related that “there is a pleasure--perhaps the greatest of which the sufferer is susceptible--in displaying the wasted or ulcerated limb, or the cancer in the breast; and the fouler the crime, with so much the more difficulty does the perpetrator prevent it from thrusting up its snake-like head to frighten the world; for it is that cancer, or that crime, which constitutes their respective individuality.”  In a similar manner, Melville wrote:
Small reason was there to doubt…that ever since that almost fatal encounter, Ahab had cherished a wild vindictiveness against the whale, all the more fell for that in his frantic morbidness he at last came to identify with him, not only all his bodily woes, but all his intellectual and spiritual exasperations. The White Whale swam before him as the monomaniac incarnation of all those malicious agencies which some deep men feel eating in them, till they are left living on with half a heart and half a lung (Melville 164-165).
Ahab’s dying soliloquy is the antithesis to Dimmesdale’s, as Ahab dies vaingloriously, celebrating his Promethean transgression and reveling in his Titanic contempt and in misericord with Tashtego, who had fastened a bird to the mast with his hammer and thus, “like Satan, would not sink to hell till she had dragged a living part of heaven along with her, and helmeted herself with it” In a frenzied rage, Ahab thrust his spear into and “piled upon the whale’s white hump the sum of all the general rage and hate felt by his whole race from Adam down; and then, as if his chest had been a mortar, he burst his hot heart’s shell upon it.” (Melville 164-165):
‘I turn my body from the sun. What ho, Tashtego! let me hear thy hammer. Oh! ye three unsurrendered spires of mine; thou uncracked keel; and only god-bullied hull; thou firm deck, and haughty helm, and Pole-pointed prow,—death-glorious ship! must ye then perish, and without me? Am I cut off from the last fond pride of meanest shipwrecked captains? Oh, lonely death on lonely life! Oh, now I feel my topmost greatness lies in my topmost grief. Ho, ho! from all your furthest bounds, pour ye now in, ye bold billows of my whole foregone life, and top this one piled comber of my death! (Melville 507).
In his steadfast and defiant death, Ahab functions as a cathartic vehicle for both the writer and the sympathetic reader.  Tragically immersed in his fatal limitations, he now turns away from the sun and unrepentantly curses Moby-Dick and plummets to the depths, “fixed by infatuation, or fidelity, or fate” along with all but Ishmael (Melville 507). Towards thee I roll,” Ahab cries, “thou all-destroying but unconquering whale; to the last I grapple with thee; from hell’s heart I stab at thee; for hate’s sake I spit my last breath at thee. Sink all coffins and all hearses to one common pool! and since neither can be mine, let me then tow to pieces, while still chasing thee, though tied to thee, thou damned whale! Thus, I give up the spear!’ (Melville 507).  In spite, Ahab turns himself from the sun and acknowledges the overwhelming presence of evil in the world or, rather, its inhumanity and dies in violent defiance of it.
Earlier, however, Ahab asserted his brotherhood with an ancient Leviathan: ‘He turns and turns him to it,—how slowly, but how steadfastly, his homage-rendering and invoking brow, with his last dying motions. He too worships fire; most faithful, broad, baronial vassal of the sun!—Oh that these too-favoring eyes should see these too-favoring sights. (Melville 441).  In his search for possession of the divine fire of unmediated insight, however, he becomes imbalanced.  On the third day of the chase, Ahab reflects that, “thinking is, or ought to be, a coolness and a calmness; and our poor hearts throb, and our poor brains beat too much for that. And yet, I’ve sometimes thought my brain was very calm—frozen calm, this old skull cracks so, like a glass in which the contents turned to ice, and shiver it” (Melville 498).  Ahab’s singular preoccupation with his fiery hate has made him hard but frigid. In a moment of clarity, Ahab laments “What is it, what nameless, inscrutable, unearthly thing is it; what cozening, hidden lord and master, and cruel, remorseless emperor commands me; that against all natural lovings and longings, I so keep pushing, and crowding, and jamming myself on all the time; recklessly making me ready to do what in my own proper, natural heart, I durst not so much as dare? Is Ahab, Ahab? Is it I, God, or who, that lifts this arm?” (Melville 481). Ahab’s monomania has sundered his humanities yet, in his final confrontation with Moby-Dick, we sense in ourselves a common plight, a bond of misericord.  As Broadhead writes, Melville “shows us a world so fully inhuman that Ahab’s rite of cosmic defiance seems like a noble and necessary response; then he returns us to an everyday world in which canny skill and cheerful sociability seem like sufficient images of ultimate value” (Broadhead 151).  The novel does not seek to provide a transcendental solution to the human condition but, rather, sees synthesis in the conscious acceptance of discord.
In “The Try-Works” Ishmael seems to momentarily lose himself to the dark siren call of Ahab’s world.  He sees a world of darkness and flames spread out before him and realizes that he has lost sight of the ship’s compass.  Awakening from his dream, he realizes that he is facing the wrong way and turns the rudder in just enough time to avoid sinking the ship.  Ultimately, it seems, Ishmael is saved by his skepticism, whereas Ahab is doomed by the fixture of his purpose.  Accordingly, Ishmael issues a direct warning to the reader.
Give not thyself up, then, to fire, lest it invert thee, deaden thee; as for the time it did me. There is a wisdom that is woe; but there is a woe that is madness. And there is a Catskill eagle in some souls that can alike dive down into the blackest gorges, and soar out of them again and become invisible in the sunny spaces. And even if he for ever flies within the gorge, that gorge is in the mountains; so that even in his lowest swoop the mountain eagle is still higher than other birds upon the plain, even though they soar (Melville 380).
As Emerson wrote, “The secret of the illusoriness is in the necessity of a succession of moods or objects. Gladly we would anchor, but the anchorage is quicksand. This onward trick of nature is too strong for us: Pero si muove. When, at night, I look at the moon and stars, I seem stationary, and they to hurry. Our love of the real draws us to permanence, but health of body consists in circulation, and sanity of mind in variety or facility of association.”  Broadhead comes to a similar conclusion: “The Catskill eagle may dive or soar, may see grounds for disbelief, doubt, or faith, but it can never alight.  We will never achieve a fast repose of final knowledge either of ourselves or of our world: we can only have a self and a world in mutable motion, the experience, sometimes satisfying, sometimes desperately wearing, of the weaving of the warp and woof of existence” (Broadhead 150).  Herein lies man’s common bond, in his humanity, for all else is inhuman.  The realization that he is at odds with the world can only be justified by the realization that he is not without company.  He is conjoined to every other man in misericord, in the recognition of his insuperable longing and through the extension of mercy to himself and others.  As Ahab exclaimed “let me look into a human eye; it is better than to gaze into sea or sky; better than to gaze upon God” (Melville 480).



Works Cited
Braswell, William. “Melville as a Critic of Emerson.” American Literature, vol. 9, no. 3, Nov. 1937, p. 317. DOI.org (Crossref), doi:10.2307/2919662.
Brodhead, Richard H. Hawthorne, Melville, and the Novel. University of Chicago Press, 1976.
Lacroix, Pierre, et al. “Misericord.” Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages, James Clarke & Co, 2002. www.oxfordreference.com, https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780227679319.001.0001/acref-9780227679319-e-1875.
Matthiessen, Francis O. American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman. Repr, Oxford Univ. Pr, 1979.
“Misericord, n. (and Int.).” OED Online, Oxford University Press. Oxford English Dictionary, https://www.oed.com/view/Entry/119537. Accessed 16 Dec. 2019.
Milder, Robert. Exiled Royalties: Melville and the Life We Imagine. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2006.
Pullan, Brian. "Charity and Poor Relief: The Early Modern Period." Encyclopedia of European Social History, edited by Peter N. Stearns, vol. 3: Social Structure/Social Protest/Deviance & Crime/Social Problems, Charles Scribner's Sons, 2001, pp. 447-452. Gale eBooks, https://link-gale-com.libproxy.wustl.edu/apps/doc/CX3460500158/GVRL?u=sain79627&sid=GVRL&xid=ce0af93f. Accessed 15 Dec. 2019.



A Bar Too Far: Arthur Dimmesdale’s Near Evasion of Earthly Judgement

A Bar Too Far: Arthur Dimmesdale’s Near Evasion of Earthly Judgement
Hester Pyrnne and Arthur Dimmesdale committed adultery, sinned, transgressed, and violated the law together.  The veracity of these statements depends on one’s perspective; some of these claims are virtual certainties while others are less clear.  That they violated the law and committed adultery can be traced to the letter of the law and their adulterous progeny, respectively.  The nature and degree of their transgressions and sins are less clear.  Taken at face value, their society’s conflation of law and religion simplifies these issues greatly: transgression and sin become equivalent.  While the narrator is dismissive of the equation of law and religion, the story seems to affirm the necessity of this arrangement by constraining Hester within the iron mores of society. Hester was doubly doomed: Chillingsworth had anticipated her escape attempt (had Arthur told hims?) and Arthur had other ambitions.  At this point, “Hester’s strong, calm, steadfastly enduring spirit almost sank, at last, on beholding this dark and grim countenance of an inevitable doom, which—at the moment when a passage seemed to open for the minister and herself out of their labyrinth of misery—showed itself, with an unrelenting smile, right in the midst of their path (Hawthorne 228-9).  The narrator tells us that Hester and Dimmesdale’s escape was not meant to be and essentially attributes this to the gravity of sin.  In any event, Hester and Arthur wouldn’t be going anywhere.
If Hester’s civil punishment was warranted by Providence, we must ask ourselves why Arthur’s wasn’t.  Is it enough that he suffered inwardly for his transgression while keeping his privileged position of authority?  While Hester must suffer open ignominy, Arthur must suffer growing worship.  If, however, one wishes to affirm the meaning of Hester’s punishment, then should be inclined to view Arthur’s final confession as an evasion of justice and the height of his hypocrisy, egotism, andflagrant antinomianism.  Dimmesdale is not merely a hypocrite but a fugitive from justice guilty of a capital crime.   And yet, in his role as minister, Arthur’s position is sanctifying in and of itself.  So long as his confessions are made on the pulpit and not the pillory, they will be contextually interpreted within the framework of a sermon (Pimple 260).  Puritan authority justifies itself through an ex post facto rationalization of its divine origins through the circular logic of Providence. In Puritan theology, election signifies both the will of the people and, more importantly, a predestinedUnconditional Election by God(Foster 142). Thus, if Dimmesdale stands at the pulpit, it must be God’s will; he must be Divine.  And yet, Hawthorne uses dramatic irony to show the reader that he is a “subtle hypocrite.”  Can he be both?
Early in the book, Arthur Dimmesdale is called upon to convince Hester Prynne to provide the name of her accomplice in crime: the father of her child.  The scene that follows drips with irony, as the reader has already been made aware of the implicit connection between Hester and Arthur: Arthur is the man whom the tribunal seeks, and he is also sitting beside rightthem on their officious balcony, bending their ears.  Speaking to Hester at the behest of the Puritan tribunal, Arthur must perform a feat of rhetoric as delicate as a rope walking and “the trying nature of his position drove the blood from his cheek, and made his lips tremulous” (Hawthorne 63).  Arthur’s performance, however, is but one feature of a larger spectacle orchestrated by the highest earthly authorities this society has to offer, who naturally serve as the legal tribunal.  The tribunal’s deliberations are far from celestial; they are rather absurd. “They were, doubtless, good men, just and sage,” Hawthorne insists, “but, out of the whole human family, it would not have been easy to select the same number of wise and virtuous persons, who should be less capable of sitting in judgment on an erring woman’s heart, and disentangling its mesh of good and evil, than the sages of rigid aspect towards whom Hester Prynne now turned her face” (Hawthorne 61).  Their officiousness only heightened the ridiculousness of their overexertion of authority and typified a general lack of self-awareness and a certain naïve faith in their righteousness.  Here are the self-reliant men of New England! Their intuitions are perforce the tuitions of others.
They are excused, in large part, because they belonged to a harder, more primitive world and lacked the refinement of Hawthorne’s contemporaries (an assertion served with a large amount of irony). Hawthorne jests that “the period was hardly, if at all, earlier than that of our story, when a dispute concerning the right of property in a pig not only caused a fierce and bitter contest in the legislative body of the colony, but resulted in an important modification of the framework itself of the legislature.  Thus, Hawthorne explains, the witnesses of Hester Prynne’s disgrace had not yet passed beyond their simplicity. They were stern enough to look upon her death, had that been the sentence, without a murmur at its severity, but had none of the heartlessness of another social state, which would find only a theme for jest in an exhibition like the present.”  Hawthorne seems to imply that by the standards of his day, this spectacle would be rightfully viewed as preposterous but, in Puritan times, it was a matter of the utmost sincerity.  At the very least, no one dared imply otherwise, for “even had there been a disposition to turn the matter into ridicule, it must have been repressed and overpowered by the solemn presence of men no less dignified than the Governor, and several of his counsellors, a judge, a general, and the ministers of the town; all of whom sat or stood in a balcony of the meeting-house, looking down upon the platform(Hawthorne 54).  In other words, these iron authorities were beyond reproach.  
Their very positions made them unassailable; to question an elected official was tantamount to heresy and rebellion.  Thedark and solemn clothes worn by the members of the magistrate, were not merely emblems of their authority as judges but “distinguished… a dignity of mien, belonging to a period when the forms of authority were felt to possess the sacredness of Divine institutions” (Hawthorne 61).  From the centrality of their civic and religious authority, they claimed for themselves, by way of Providence, a divine attribution of power.  Thus, Governor Bellingham, for instance, claims the prefix “worshipful.” Hawthorne utilizes liberal irony in reference to the sanctity of their system of justice:
Amongst any other population, or at a later period in the history of New England, the grim rigidity that petrified the bearded physiognomies of these good people would have augured some awful business in hand. It could have betokened nothing short of the anticipated execution of some noted culprit, on whom the sentence of a legal tribunal had but confirmed the verdict of public sentiment. But, in that early severity of the Puritan character, an inference of this kind could not so indubitably be drawn.
The last sentence of the above quote, begs the question, why not? Earlier, the reader was told that the witnesses would not have been much more perturbed if they were awaiting an execution; some of the less appealing wives want just that, in fact. Perhaps, the magistrates’ should be recognized for their ability to channel the passions of the mob into a more suitableresponse.  Theirs is a kind of sanctified mob justice,“as befitted a people amongst whom religion and law were almost identical, and in whose character both were so thoroughly interfused, that the mildest and the severest acts of public discipline were alike made venerable and awful.  The difference between a civilized execution punishment and a barbarous punishment might simply depend upon the office of the beadle who allows the populace to be witnesses rather than vigilantes.  
In The Scarlet Letter, the town beadle certainly fulfills this office: “this personage prefigured and represented in his aspect the whole dismal severity of the Puritanical code of law, which it was his business to administer in its final and closest application to the offender” (Hawthorne 50).  On the other hand, the more dignified magistrates wished to keep a healthy distance between their judgements and their consequences.  Accordingly,when such personages could constitute a part of the spectacle, without risking the majesty or reverence of rank and office, it was safely to be inferred that the infliction of a legal sentence would have an earnest and effectual meaning" (Hawthorne 54).  For such lofty personages to oversee such an event in person indicated an expectation of beneficial publicity.
The magistrates’ handling of Hester’s trial is undoubtedlyperformative, like their solemn garb, and always seems to conveniently support and reinforce their privileged positions of power serving as a warning to any potential disruptors of the conservative social order. “It might be that a sluggish bond-servant, or an undutiful child, whom his parents had given over to the civil authority, was to be corrected at the whipping-post. It might be, that an Antinomian, a Quaker, or other heterodox religionist was to be scourged out of the town, or an idle and vagrant Indian, whom the white man’s fire-water had made riotous about the streets, was to be driven with stripes into the shadow of the forest” (Hawthorne 47). The magistrates“Scriptural authority” seems to be invoked in a very partial mannerthey are primarily interested in: children, heretics, and drunk Indians.  Thus, we might conclude that they are more concerned with suppressing disorderly conduct than fraud, especially amongst their own.
Were the magistrates, however, in possession of anything resembling divine intuition, they might have punished Hester similarly. In reality, however, they were only capable of partiallyjudging the surface of a transgression and so failed to perceive that they were catalyzing in Hester “a freedom of speculation, then common enough on the other side of the Atlantic, but which our forefathers, had they known it, would have held to be a deadlier crime than that stigmatized by the scarlet letter” (Hawthorne 152).  Crime, it would seem then might be more closely associated with disobedience to male authority than divine authority.  As dangerous as Hester seemed after potentially violating her marital vows, she would have been greeted with far more hostility for questioning “the whole system of ancient prejudice, wherewith was linked much of ancient principle” (Hawthorne 152).  Crime and sin must be seen predominantly as agents of disorder.
Returning to the trial of Hester Prynne, we see that Arthur is very much their man.  Whether more refined or simply morecapable of presenting himself as the earthly embodiment of their sacred order, Arthur commands a certain awe and garnerspopular supportIronically, however, the power of his speech is not diminished but multiplied by his refusal to divulge his secret crime and face “the more rigid order of principles in religion and government” which were the outward manifestations of his religious order’s faith.  If celestial authority can be claimed in the earthly realm, how then can Arthur, as one of its representatives, excuse himself from a public expiation of his sin, while Hester, on the other hand, stands beneath him on receiving end of an “ignominious” public trial.  Within this context, Arthur’s plea that “it were wronging the very nature of woman to force her to lay open her heart’s secrets in such broad daylight, and in  presence of so great a multitude” is  highly ironic and self-serving given that, he himself was so intimately involved in both her crime and her punishment. I would argue that, in his Puritan society, the pulpit, like the “scaffold constituted a portion of a penal machine, which now, for two or three generations past, has been merely historical and traditionary among us, but was held, in the old time, to be as effectual an agent, in the promotion of good citizenship, as ever was the guillotine among the terrorists of France.”  Hester’s exile places her in a position not unlike that which Hawthorne jokingly claims as a “DECAPITATED SURVEYOR…who writes from beyond the grave” (Hawthorne 42). In Hester’s case,“SCARLET LETTER, so fantastically embroidered and illuminated upon her bosom…had the effect of a spell, taking her out of the ordinary relations with humanity, and enclosing her in a sphere by herself.”  As the tale proceeds, we see that while Hester is forced to suffer the open scorn of society, Arthur must endure its adoration with an anguished conscience (and agrowing fear of exposure).  Dimmesdale actually manages toelevate his position in society through his sin as it gives new fire to his rhetoric that captivates the hearts of the populace.
Arthur’s feelings towards the success of his sermons iscomplicated.  According to Kenneth D. Pimple, “it is true that the minister is physically weak and hypersensitive, and that he cannot control his cowardice or his fear, but, as the narrator tells us, ever since committing his one sin, Dimmesdale has found his "acts . . . easy to arrange" (Pimple 261).  Even in the forest scene, Dimmesdale, through cunning rhetoric and childish despondency, pleads, “Think for me, Hester! Thou art strong. Resolve for me!” (Hawthorne 183). Hester’s first response is that he should stop living with Chillingsworth: “Thou must dwell no longer with this man,’ said Hester, slowly and firmly. ‘Thy heart must be no longer under his evil eye!” (Hawthorne 183).  Yet, Dimmesdale knows that he cannot shake Chillingsworth’s power over him so long as he can threaten to expose Arthur’s crimecompounded by years of hypocrisy, to his adoring publicIt is, however, “typical” of Arthur to refuse to take any accountability for himself.  
Seemingly unable to carry on and unwilling to address the source of his suffering (his hypocrisy), he seduces Hester intoassuming the responsibility for yet another transgression.  He is willing to sin again, it seems, so long as he can convince himself that it was not his idea and provided that he doesn’t have to do it alone.  Anyways, he can hardly be expected to continue his holy work with a blackmailer about! He feels no shame as he plays upon Hester’s heartstrings and drives her toward what he himself cannot admit he wants.
“Alas, what a ruin has befallen thee!” said Hester, with the tears gushing into her eyes. “Wilt thou die for very weakness? There is no other cause!” “The judgment of God is on me,” answered the conscience-stricken priest. “It is too mighty for me to struggle with!” “Heaven would show mercy,” rejoined Hester, “hadst thou but the strength to take advantage of it.” “Be thou strong for me!” answered he. “Advise me what to do (Hawthorne 183).
Before suggesting that they elope, however, Hester suggests that Dimmesdale take advantage of Heaven’s mercy.  If Hester were standing on the pulpit, rather than nursing Arthur in the forest, the implication would implicitly be inferred as a summons to confession.  This was not the advice that Arthur was looking for, however.  After all, as in his sermons,
The minister well knew—subtle, but remorseful hypocrite that he was!—the light in which his vague confession would be viewed. He had striven to put a cheat upon himself by making the avowal of a guilty conscience, but had gained only one other sin, and a self-acknowledged shame, without the momentary relief of being self-deceived.
Is hypocrisy a moral necessity for Dimmesdale?He seems to conceive of his evasion of justice in terms very sympathetic to his ambition, “His spirit rose, as it were, with a bound, and attained a nearer prospect of the sky, than throughout all the misery which had kept him grovelling on the earth. Of a deeply religious temperament, there was inevitably a tinge of the devotional in his mood.  Additionally, when Chillingworth forces Dimmesdale to (abstractly) confront the question of his hypocrisy, Arthur is typically effete.  Arthur reflects that “it may be that they are kept silent by the very constitution of their nature. Or,—can we not suppose it?—guilty as they may be, retaining, nevertheless, a zeal for God’s glory and man’s welfare, they shrink from displaying themselves black and filthy in the view of men; because, thenceforward, no good can be achieved by them; no evil of the past be redeemed by better service” (Hawthorne 122). Yet, as Herman Melville, wrote in Moby Dick, 
Woe to that pilot of the living God who slights it. Woe to him whom this world charms from Gospel duty! Woe to him who seeks to pour oil upon the waters when God has brewed them into a gale! Woe to him who seeks to please rather than to appal! Woe to him whose good name is more to him than goodness! Woe to him who, in this world, courts not dishonor! Woe to him who would not be true, even though to be false were salvation! Yea, woe to him who, as the great Pilot Paul has it, while preaching to others is himself a castaway!’ (Melville 42-3).
It is not improbable that Melville was thinking of Hawthorne’s stories when he wrote “The Sermon” and, it is a certainty that this chapter of Moby Dick has much to say that might illuminate the tragic hypocrisy of Arthur Dimmesdale’s frustrated attempts to evade earthly justice and the “torment” that this “seven years’ cheat” inflict upon him (Hawthorne 178).  Indeed, Arthur Dimmesdale’s story bares many similarities to Melville’s portrayal of Jonah. Namely, in both cases, we are admonished to be True and shown that there are consequences for egotistical delays of repentance; it may be that the bar of judgement demands earthly penitence without any earthly assurances of salvation or, in the case of Dimmesdale, that repression is too hard on his nerves. Regardless, both men terribly fear apparent moral necessity when it forces them to face some primal terror, which in both cases, might be equated with an angry mob.  They fear to confront the chaos of the common heart; they fear the abyss of infamy.  “Bidden by the Lord to sound those unwelcome truths in the ears of a wicked Nineveh, Jonah, appalled at the hostility he should raise, fled from his mission, and sought to escape his duty and his God by taking ship at Joppa. But God is everywhere; Tarshish he never reached (Melville 42). In similar fashion, Arthur is compelled to confront the sanctified with the unwelcome truth of his wickedness, yet he too is “appalled at the hostility it should raise” and “fled from his mission” to the forest, where he “sought to escape his duty” and board a ship with Hester and Pearl.
Throughout the novel, Dimmesdale insists that he is too weak to confess but this is not so, as he does confess and in a state of weakness that is verges on death.  It is not temperamental weakness but spiritual weakness that hamstrings him.  Namely, ambition and egotism prevent him from revealing himself.  As in Hawthorne’s tale The Egotism; or Bosom Serpent
It was partly the result of desperation on finding that the cavern of his own bosom had not proved deep and dark enough to hide the secret, even while it was so secure a fortress for the loathsome fiend that had crept into it. But still more, this craving for notoriety was a symptom of the intense morbidness which now pervaded his nature. All persons chronically diseased are egotists, whether the disease be of the mind or body; whether it be sin, sorrow, or merely the more tolerable calamity of some endless pain, or mischief among the cords of mortal life. Such individuals are made acutely conscious of a self, by the torture in which it dwells…There is a pleasure--perhaps the greatest of which the sufferer is susceptible--in displaying the wasted or ulcerated limb, or the cancer in the breast; and the fouler the crime, with so much the more difficulty does the perpetrator prevent it from thrusting up its snake-like head to frighten the world; for it is that cancer, or that crime, which constitutes their respective individuality. …A little while before, had held himself so scornfully above the common lot of men, now paid full allegiance to this humiliating law. The snake in his bosom seemed the symbol of a monstrous egotism to which everything was referred, and which he pampered, night and day, with a continual and exclusive sacrifice of devil worship.
This description seems to fit Dimmesdale like a glove.  Indeed, it is the reason why he left his glove on the pillory, why he had to lie about being there, and why he feels his heart is being gnawed at (a sure symptom of a bosom serpent).  Additionally, it is the reason why he frets solely about himself.  We see little evidence of his good works and what little he does for Hester could easily be attributed to self-preservation.  It is by her grace, that he stands before his parishioners in “angelic” splendor.  So too does he hold himself above the law and, therefore, the common man.  Like Roderick, Dimmesdale cannot help but talk down to others, while “at the same time giving an instinctive clutch to his breast.” His egotism makes him see the whole world as a stage for his redemption and, when he mounts the pulpit, he seems only to speak of himself.  Of course, he is also morbidly diseased and, as Chillingsworth notes “whether the disease be of the mind or body” it seems to indicate a certain toxic preoccupation.  In any event, Hawthorne has stated that “All persons chronically diseased are egotists” and, in that respect, the case is made rather simple.  Like Roderick, Arthur “appeared to imagine that the snake was a divinity,--not celestial, it is true, but darkly infernal,--and that he thence derived an eminence and a sanctity, horrid, indeed, yet more desirable than whatever ambition aims at. Thus he drew his misery around him like a regal mantle, and looked down triumphantly upon those whose vitals nourished no deadly monster.”  The reader may be reminded of Arthur as he wrote his Election Day speech and “wondered that Heaven should see fit to transmit the grand and solemn music of its oracles through so foul an organ-pipe as he.”  Additionally, we might consider Arthur’s morbid and exhibitionist display of his scarlet letter as an act that is very much in line with the aforementioned symptoms of egotism.  The grounds for comparison here are immensely fertile and the connection virtually certain.
Dimmesdale has proven adept at manipulating his parishioners, however, the spiritual leader of the town is helplessly dependent upon the affirmation of the iron authoritieswhom he fears to be discovered by.   Hawthorne wrote, “In no state of society would he have been what is called a man of liberal views; it would always be essential to his peace to feel the pressure of a faith about him, supporting, while it confined him within its iron framework“ (Hathorne 114).  Though a tender soul, Dimmesdale needed an iron framework.  He was not equipped for even a stroll in the moral wilderness.  Yet, he had inescapably transgressed into it and yet endured through masochistic repression; he dealt with his hypocrisy by claiming that he was too weak to be otherwise and attributing it to the will of Providence, rather than his own.  Finallyafter being enabled by Hester, Dimmesdale plunges anew into “the rank luxuriance of a guilty passion.” 
The taint of his sin has been the source of his ascendancy through the social ranks; it gave him the “tongue of flames, symbolizing, it would seem, not the power of speech in foreign and unknown languages, but that of addressing the whole human brotherhood in the heart’s native language” (Hawthorne 131). His egotism was mistaken for humility and his volatile and pathetic exclamations invoked sympathy.  It seems that the appeal of Dimmesdale’s sermons lay in their cathartic power rather than their import.  From the outset of the novel, the narrator has told us that, “The young pastor’s voice was tremulously sweet, rich, deep, and broken. The feeling that it so evidently manifested, rather than the direct purport of the words, caused it to vibrate within all hearts, and brought the listeners into one accord of sympathy” (Hawthorne 64).  In “The Embroidered Sin: Confessional Evasion in ‘The Scarlet Letter,” Dennis Foster writes that:
The people hear the words but, the narrator tells us, fail to understand their true, ”deadly purport,” even though the words affect them deeply, stirring in them the feeling that they have experienced sins too horrible for them to speak. Although Dimmesdale supposes that there is some truth he has not yet spoken and that is why he is misunderstood, the people’s response is sympathetic (at least insofar as they are aroused to an imitative guilt) if not comprehending. The anguish that Dimmesdale feels for his own transgression is mirrored in the excited consciences of his parishioners, Dimmesdale’s confession having provided the terms for sin by which they can imagine their own deeds (Foster 146).
It is certainly worthy of noting that the reader is seldom exposed to the content of Dimmesdale’s sermons.  The reader is only shown what the narrator wishes to achieve the effects that he desires.  Thus, the reader is aware of Dimmesdale’s hypocrisy but not burdened by it.  Furthermore, Dimmesdale’s worst flaws are highlighted by the uniquely unsympathetic Chillingsworth, who himself is subjected to substantial narrative framing in order to ensure that he remains distasteful and unreliable.  After returning from the forest, Dimmesdale dismisses Chillingsworth altogether and is then free to marvel at his own divine intellect.  Arthur then wondered that Heaven should see fit to transmit the grand and solemn music of its oracles through so foul an organ-pipe as he. However, leaving that mystery to solve itself, or go unsolved forever, he drove his task onward, with earnest haste and ecstasy.  Thus, the night flew away, as if it were a winged steed, and he careering on it” (Hawthorne 210).  Indeed, freed from self-doubt, Dimmesdale is carried by his fatal ambition as he prepares for the high point of his career, his Election Day speech.
The following day, the young and eminent divine” followed the magistrates in a parade of majestic authority; a celebration of the sanctity and divine institutions in through a celebration of their annual renewal. “His was the profession, at that era, in which intellectual ability displayed itself far more than in political life; for—leaving a higher motive out of the question—it offered inducements powerful enough, in the almost worshipping respect of the community, to win the most aspiring ambition into its service. Even political power—as in the case of Increase Mather—was within the grasp of a successful priest.” It is of no small significance that the narrator forcefully directs the reader’s attention to the very earthly appeal of Arthur’s profession and contrasts him with Increase Mather, who accrued power for himself throughout the Salem Witch trials.  On the eve of his confession, the reader receives the strongest implication of Dimmesdale’s arrogant egotism and earthly motivations.  As he moved within the procession, he seemed to glide “along the track of a creed” which had worn “its passage continually deeper with the lapse of time he was swept along as if on rails.  “Yet, if the clergyman were rightly viewed, his strength seemed not of the body. It might be spiritual, andimparted to him by angelic ministrations. It might be the exhilaration of that potent cordial, which is distilled only in the furnace-glow of earnest and long-continued thought” (Hawthorne 222).  The latter case, which we may probably attribute to egotism, seems to be the more probable explanation. At any rate, Hester and Arthur are quite a pair; Hester has shame but no guilt, and Arthur has guilt but no shame!  As Dimmesdale passes Hester, he does not even acknowledge her.  
She hardly knew him now! He, moving proudly past, enveloped, as it were, in the rich music, with the procession of majestic and venerable fathers; he, so unattainable in his worldly position, and still more so in that far vista of his unsympathizing thoughts, through which she now beheld him! Her spirit sank with the idea that all must have been a delusion, and that, vividly as she had dreamed it, there could be no real bond betwixt the clergyman and herself. And thus much of woman was there in Hester, that she could scarcely forgive him,—least of all now, when the heavy footstep of their approaching Fate might be heard, nearer, nearer, nearer!—for being able so completely to withdraw himself from their mutual world; while she groped darkly, and stretched forth her cold hands, and found him not (Hawthorne 223).
Here we are reminded of their midnight rendezvous on the scaffold, which anticipates and contrasts powerfully with Dimmesdale’s approaching daylight confession.  
On that night, Dimmesdale had sought human sympathy and reached out to grasp the hand of his wife and daughter but was shocked by Pearl’s withdrawal of her hand.  While Dimmesdale has fooled most of the town, he cannot fool Pearl or elicit much sympathy from any other children: “children are not readily won to be familiar with me. They will not climb my knee, nor prattle in my ear, nor answer to my smile; but stand apart, and eye me strangely. Even little babes, when I take them in my arms, weep bitterly” (Hawthorne 193).  The sympathy of children is with truth, it seems, and Pearl is acutely sensitive and intolerant of falsehood. Of all the characters in the story, only Pearl seems to be able to see herself through an untarnished mirror consistently.  She seems to have no ego; she is pure, unrestrained Id. Wherever she goes, there she isalways a pure spirit, although capricious.  She seems to be the honest enactment of the whims of Hester’s heart.  She is the emblem of a broken law; she is the embodiment of freedom.  Through the reflection of Pearl’s (and other childrens) lack of sympathy for Dimmesdale, we are given a clue to the real contents of hisheart, a Bosom Serpent that gnawed at him constantly!
Indeed, as Dimmesdale stood upon the pillory that night, his thoughts hardly touched upon Hester until he heard Pearl’s laughter.  Instead, he fantasizes about how surprised people would be if they found him there the next morning.  Nor was he thinking, like others, of the impending death of the Governor.  No, “while standing on the scaffold, in this vain show of expiation, Mr. Dimmesdale was overcome with a great horror of mind, as if the universe were gazing at a scarlet token on his naked breast, right over his heart” (Hawthorne 137).Dimmesdale lets out a scream.  Not a scream designed to draw attention; this was more of a bleating emission of pent up nervous energy.  His intention was to attempt a kind of exposure therapy designed to help him overcome his overwhelming sense of guilt. Yet, 
there was no peril of discovery. The minister might stand there, if it so pleased him, until morning should redden in the east, without other risk than that the dank and chill night-air would creep into his frame, and stiffen his joints with rheumatism, and clog his throat with catarrh and cough; thereby defrauding the expectant audience of to-morrow’s prayer and sermon. No eye could see him, save that ever-wakeful one which had seen him in his closet, wielding the bloody scourge. Why, then, had he come hither? Was it but the mockery of penitence? A mockery, indeed, but in which his soul trifled with itself! A mockery at which angels blushed and wept, while fiends rejoiced, with jeering laughter! He had been driven hither by the impulse of that Remorse which dogged him everywhere, and whose own sister and closely linked companion was that Cowardice which invariably drew him back, with her tremulous gripe, just when the other impulse had hurried him to the verge of a disclosure (Hawthorne 136-7).
Accordingly, when Father Wilson walks by, Dimmesdale is given quite a fright! After Wilson passes and Arthur recovers from the shock, he proceeds to gloat at his evasion of detection.  At a superficial level of consciousness, he wants to confess.  At a deeper level, he merely wants to steady his nerves by seeking to make a secret concession to his guilt so that he may continue to pursue his ambitions more freely. This is another version of his closet penance.  In both cases, he seems to be seeking a controlled release of repressed desires, although now he is upping the stakes.  As soon as he is out of harm's way, he is overcome by a mischievous glee at having pulled one over on the higher-ups once again. Instinctively, he begins to gloat and make light of the situation.  The protege now stands above his teacher and it is as if the pillory has been transformed into a podium.  Looking down on his Father Wilson, "the minister could hardly restrain himself . 'A good evening to you venerable Father Wilson!  Come up hither, I pray you, and pass a pleasant hour with me!" (Hawthorne 139). After this “lurid playfulness”Arthur imagines how the earliest riser, coming forth in the dim twilight, would perceive a vaguely defined figure aloft on the place of shame; and, half crazed betwixt alarm and curiosity, would go, knocking from door to door, summoning all the people to behold the ghost—as he needs must think it—of some defunct transgressor. A dusky tumult would flap its wings from one house to another. Then—the morning light still waxing stronger—old patriarchs would rise up in great haste, each in his flannel gown, and matronly dames, without pausing to put off their night-gear. The whole tribe of decorous personages, who had never heretofore been seen with a single hair of their heads awry, would start into public view, with the disorder of a nightmare in their aspects.

Surprisingly, Arthur didn’t think of Hester once while imagining this dramatic tableau, a morning visage of himself, “half-frozen to death.  Their moment of passion, the child it produced, the ignominy that she suffered seven years ago on the very platform on which he now stood trying to stealthily expiate his guilty conscience...none of these entered his glorious fantasy!  There was no room left in his egotistical heart.  Sensing this, Pearl will remove her hand from his on the scaffold.  Upon reflection, Dimmesdale’s falseness and egotism are not so unlike Chillingsworth’s.  Chillingsworth pries into the heart of the man who impregnated his wife while he was marooned, while Dimmesdale seems to especially enjoy the priviliged insight that his position gives him into the hearts of so many of his fellow Bostonians.  He delights in the blusheing confessions of young maidens whose devotion to him extends well beyond a desire for spiritual guidance.  Their thinly veiled attraction seems to be his favorite perk.  These “young virgins who so idolized their minister, and had made a shrine for him in their white bosoms; which now, by the by, in their hurry and confusion, they would scantly have given themselves time to cover with their kerchiefs.”  Arthur Dimmesdale’s Bosom Serpent had not done its office!  
Dimmesdale’s refusal to expiate his sins in front of his congregation, exposes him to the vengeance of Chillingsworth.  Truly, the two belong together.  And so, he meets Chillingsworth the following day.  As Arthur sees Chillingsworth, he begins to feel a vague sense of terror: “I tell thee, my soul shivers at him!” muttered the minister again. “Who is he? Who is he? Canst thou do nothing for me? I have a nameless horror of the man!”  Pearl, not Hester, has the answer for him.  Chillingsworth has come, she says, because “Thou wast not bold!—thou wast not true!”—answered the child. “Thou wouldst not promise to take my hand, and mother’s hand, to-morrow noontide!” (Hawthorne 144-5).  And it is thanks to Chillingsworth, and his “dark necessity” that Dimmesdale is compelled to mount the pillory in the daytime.  Undoubtedly, had the pangs of his conscience subsided, he would have been happy to ‘let bygones be bygones.’  Yet, as Mistress Higgins notes easily upon seeing Dimmesdale energetically walking towards the podium for his Election Day speech: 
We may all see it in the sunshine; and it glows like a red flame in the dark. Thou wearest it openly; so, there need be no question about that. But this minister! Let me tell thee, in thine ear! When the Black Man sees one of his own servants, signed and sealed, so shy of owning to the bond as is the Reverend Mr. Dimmesdale, he hath a way of ordering matters so that the mark shall be disclosed in open daylight to the eyes of all the world! What is it that the minister seeks to hide, with his hand always over his heart? Ha, Hester Prynne!”  
After this encounter, the narration shifts to a description of Dimmesdale’s sermon.  His “foul…organ pipe” was in full effect and his “vocal organ was in itself a rich endowment; insomuch that a listener, comprehending nothing of the language in which the preacher spoke, might still have been swayed to and fro by the mere tone and cadence. Like all other music, it breathed passion and pathos, and emotions high or tender, in a tongue native to the human heart, wherever educated.”  Once again, Dimmesdale plays the “subtle, but remorseful hypocrite.”  Once again, it seems that his congregation is moved, not by his power to elucidate the scripture, but by his ability to obscure it and infuse it with his “animal spirit.”
If the town slept through his midnight shriek upon the pillory, however, they were wide awake to his anguished passion now and they drank it up.  They were seized by “the whisper, or the shriek, as it might be conceived, of suffering humanity, that touched a sensibility in every bosom! At times this deep strain of pathos was all that could be heard, and scarcely heard, sighing amid a desolate silence.”  He cast a spell over the audience and heralded “a spirit of prophecy” and announced that“it was his mission to foretell a high and glorious destiny for the newly gathered people of the Lord” (Hawthorne 232).  Yet while they were thrilled by his glorious prophecies, they were haunted by “a certain deep, sad undertone of pathos, which could not be interpreted otherwise than the natural regret of one soon to pass away” (Hawthorne 232).  
Once again he managed to transfigure his dreaded sin into sympathetic music, enrapturing the city of Boston, “it was as if an angel, in his passage to the skies, had shaken his bright wings over the people for an instant,—at once a shadow and a splendor,—and had shed down a shower of golden truths upon them” (Hawthorne 232).  Yet, how could this man, who could not tell good from evil, the day before, how could he have risen to such heights of glory?  
He stood, at this moment, on the very proudest eminence of superiority, to which the gifts of intellect, rich lore, prevailing eloquence, and a reputation of whitest sanctity, could exalt a clergyman in New England’s earliest days, when the professional character was of itself a lofty pedestal. Such was the position which the minister occupied, as he bowed his head forward on the cushions of the pulpit, at the close of his Election Sermon. Meanwhile Hester Prynne was standing beside the scaffold of the pillory, with the scarlet letter still burning on her breast! (Hawthorne 232).  
Hester’s transgression had apparently given her a special sympathy with Dimmesdale, but did she really understand him?  When he passed her on his way to his Election Day sermon, he paid no heed to her and realizes that she herself was yet another victim of Arthur’s charismatic egotism and is deeply hurt.  Once she had pleaded with him to protect her, now she sensed a “labyrinth of misery” encircling her.  There was no escape.  In the Governor’s mansion she cried, “Thou wast my pastor, and hadst charge of my soul, and knowest me better than these men can Thou knowest,—for thou hast sympathies which these men lack!—thou knowest what is in my heart, and what are a mother’s rights, and how much the stronger they are, when that mother has but her child and the scarlet letter!”  She no longer seems to feel this sympathy and wonders if it was from the beginning just an illusion (specifically, a projection).
Hester protected Arthur throughout the novel.  Had she given up the minister’s name in the beginning, she would not have had to wear the scarlet letter.  Further, having done so, she would not have been alone with “but her child and the scarlet letter.”  All along, Dimmesdale share a deep sympathy with Hesteryet he also enjoyed reading the hearts of the blushing virgins in his church.  Once, he had made a covenant with her in the forest: “What we did had a consecration of its own. We felt it so! We said so to each other! Hast thou forgotten it?” “Hush, Hester!” said Arthur Dimmesdale, rising from the ground. “No; I have not forgotten!” (Hawthorne 181).  In their most intimate moment in the novel, he hushes her!  He does not want to acknowledge what he did; he wants to repress it.  In his final moments, Hester asks him once more, “Shall we not meet again?” whispered she, bending her face down close to his. “Shall we not spend our immortal life together? Surely, surely, we have ransomed one another, with all this woe! Thou lookest far into eternity, with those bright dying eyes! Then tell me what thou seest?” “Hush, Hester, hush!” said he, with tremulous solemnity.
“The law we broke!—the sin here so awfully revealed!—let these alone be in thy thoughts! I fear! I fear! It may be, that, when we forgot our God,—when we violated our reverence each for the other’s soul,—it was thenceforth vain to hope that we could meet hereafter, in an everlasting and pure reunion. God knows; and He is merciful! He hath proved his mercy, most of all, in my afflictions. By giving me this burning torture to bear upon my breast! By sending yonder dark and terrible old man, to keep the torture always at red-heat! By bringing me hither, to die this death of triumphant ignominy before the people! Had either of these agonies been wanting, I had been lost forever! Praised be his name! His will be done! Farewell!” That final word came forth with the minister’s expiring breath. The multitude, silent till then, broke out in a strange, deep voice of awe and wonder, which could not as yet find utterance, save in this murmur that rolled so heavily after the departed spirit.
In the final analysis, Dimmesdale seems to be a kind of Puritan Faust.  He goes around in an egocentric haze, hardly aware of the consequences of his actions.  When forced to acknowledge them, he attributes them to a fiend.  Although he views his heart as tainted, he seems convinced that his motives remain relatively noble.  What happened to the man who, in reference to his congregation’s adoration of him, had so recently said “There is no substance in it! It is cold and dead, and can do nothing for me! Of penance, I have had enough! Of penitence, there has been none! Else, I should long ago have thrown off these garments of mock holiness, and have shown myself to mankind as they will see me at the judgment-seat” (Hawthorne 178).Dimmesdale calls for faith, but since he is faithless to his own words, I call for doubt.  Once again, he stands upon the pillory, and though the light of day shines upon him, his self-awareness is dimmer than ever.  His is a public enactment of penance, not true penitence.  He has spoken shown himself freely to the world (having deemed himself too delicate for the black flower of civilization) and merely spoken in a way “whereby the worst may be inferred!” Until Dimmesdale’s very last breath, hisinsight remains dim and his words seem hollow.  Thus, they echo throughout the crowd inspiring rather liberal interpretations.  The real moral of Dimmesdale’s story, however, seems to have been foretold upon his earlier dress rehearsal upon the pillory: “But what shall we say, when an individual discovers a revelation addressed to himself alone, on the same vast sheet of record! In such a case, it could only be the symptom of a highly disordered mental state, when a man, rendered morbidly self-contemplative by long, intense, and secret pain, had extended his egotism over the whole expanse of nature, until the firmament itself should appear no more than a fitting page for his soul’s history and fate!”  This is exactly what Dimmesdale does in the end. And finally, “Woe to him whose good name is more to him than goodness!...Yea, woe to him who, as the great Pilot Paul has it, while preaching to others is himself a castaway!’ (Melville 42-3).  How can a castaway lead a nation to golden truths when he cannot know his own? 
In the conclusion of The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne writes, “Earlier in life, Hester had vainly imagined that she herself might be the destined prophetess, but had long since recognized the impossibility that any mission of divine and mysterious truth should be confided to a woman stained with sin, bowed down with shame, or even burdened with a life-long sorrow.”  If this book truly aspires to herald the coming revelation of “a new truth…in order to establish the whole relation between man and woman on a surer ground of mutual happiness,” than surely it must admit a present one: that neither could its profit be a man stained with sin.  The final passage of the Ego Serpent also seems an apt conclusion here: “The serpent was but a dark fantasy, and what it typified was as shadowy as itself.  The past, dismal as it seems, shall fling no gloom upon the future.  To give it its due importance we must think of it but as an anecdote in our Eternity.”  This seems surprisingly similar to Dimmesdale’s final conclusion.  In the end, not even their dust is allowed tomingle but, importantly, Hester’s is placed above Dimmesdale’s and perhaps, in the end, she had risen above his influence.
Works Cited

Foster, Dennis. “The Embroidered Sin: Confessional Evasion in ‘The Scarlet Letter.’” Criticism, vol. 25, no. 2, 1983, pp. 141–63. JSTOR.

Pimple, Kenneth D. “‘Subtle, but Remorseful Hypocrite’: Dimmedale’s Moral Character.” Studies in the Novel, vol. 25, no. 3, 1993, pp. 257–71. JSTOR.

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