Pride, Guilt, And Isolation In The Scarlet Letter

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In “The Scarlet Letter,” Nathaniel Hawthorne uses his three main themes, pride, guilt, and isolation. Roger Chillingworth is a great example of isolation. Chillingworth goes on the prowl for the man who he feels wronged him; the man who stole his property. His vengefulness is all-consuming. It colors every second of every day. He, much like Dimmesdale, becomes a hypocrite, pretending to be one thing-in this case, pretending to be Dimmesdale's friend and physician throughout the book-while in actuality being another. He has hatred and rage in his eyes and is enveloped and alone in a straightjacket of his own design of which he cannot escape.
On the other hand, we have Hester, who seems to have a lot of pride in her scarlet “A”. The Scarlet Letter