Table of Contents
- 1 What question does Pearl ask Dimmesdale in Chapter 12?
- 2 What did Pearl request that Dimmesdale refuse to do so?
- 3 How old is Pearl in Chapter 13 in The Scarlet Letter?
- 4 What happened to Pearl at the end of the scarlet letter?
- 5 Who is Pearl Dimmesdale in the Scarlet Letter?
- 6 What convinced the governor to keep Pearl in the Scarlet Letter?
What question does Pearl ask Dimmesdale in Chapter 12?
Pearl asks if Dimmesdale will join her and her mother when they face the crowds again, and Dimmesdale says he will only do that on judgement day, or the day Puritans believe God will bring judgement on all people and decide who goes to Heaven and who is smote on earth.
What does pearl ask of Dimmesdale before she will accept him?
Indeed, once Pearl rejoins her parents, it becomes apparent that she is right to be skeptical. She asks Dimmesdale to publicly acknowledge his relationship to her, and he refuses.
What did Pearl request that Dimmesdale refuse to do so?
When Dimmesdale refuses Pearl’s request that he stand with her on the scaffold in broad daylight, she refuses to share what she knows about Chillingworth. Pearl thus makes a statement about the causal connection between Dimmesdale’s denial of his own guilt and his incomplete understanding of the world around him.
What happens to Dimmesdale at the end of Chapter 23?
Analysis: Chapters 23–24. This third and final scaffold scene serves as a catharsis, as all unsettled matters are given resolution. Pearl acquires a father, Dimmesdale finally confesses, and Chillingworth definitively loses his chance for revenge.
How old is Pearl in Chapter 13 in The Scarlet Letter?
seven years old
As chapter 13 of The Scarlet Letter opens, Hester has aged, and find that Pearl is now seven years old.
Why does Pearl wipe off Dimmesdale’s kiss?
Why does Pearl wash off Dimmesdale’s kiss? -It is in a way of Pearl keeping her pureness and innocence. Dimmesdale is a man of sin, and in Pearl’s eyes the kiss if accepted could be a transfer of sin. She wants to be seen on the scaffold, open to the public, as Dimmesdale’s child.
What happened to Pearl at the end of the scarlet letter?
In a rather ironic ending, Pearl, the “elf-child” becomes the most human in the final scaffold scene. Having inherited property from Chillingworth, she has become the “richest heiress of her day, in the New World.” With such riches, she may have married well, but her mother has taken her away to Europe.
Why does Pearl want Dimmesdale to stand there with her and her mother?
Pearl asks Dimmesdale if he will stand upon the scaffold during the day with her mother and herself. To do so would be for Dimmesdale to confess. It is Pearl throughout the novel that goads Dimmesdale into revealing his sin, and it is to her at the end that he turns when he finally does, looking for forgiveness.
Who is Pearl Dimmesdale in the Scarlet Letter?
Pearl Character Analysis. The illegitimate daughter of Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale. Pearl serves as a symbol of her mother’s shame and triumph. At one point the narrator describes Pearl as “the scarlet letter endowed with life.”. Like the letter, Pearl is the public consequence of Hester’s very private sin.
How does Pearl react to the Scarlet Letter?
Pearl starts screaming and convulsing and points to Hester’s chest, where the scarlet letter had been removed. Hester finally has to get up and cross the stream, reattach the letter, and put her hair back under her hat. Hester then drags Pearl up to where Dimmesdale is sitting.
What convinced the governor to keep Pearl in the Scarlet Letter?
She knew the correct answer but felt contrary What convinced the governor to keep Pearl? Both Hester and Mr. Dimmesdale told the governor that Pearl was a constant reminder to Hester of her sin and that Hester was capable of being a good mother since she could pass along to Pearl the lessons she had learned since she had sinned.
Who is the illegitimate daughter in the Scarlet Letter?
The illegitimate daughter of Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale. Pearl serves as a symbol of her mother’s shame and triumph. At one point the narrator describes Pearl as “the scarlet letter endowed with life.” Like the letter, Pearl is the public consequence of Hester’s very private sin.