Dimmesdale’s speech also seemed powerful to the Puritans because of the sickness that came back to haunt him. Here, Dimmesdale realizes that he is soon to die. Dimmesdale’s realization that he is weaken led him to act differently, he allowed for Hester and Pearl to be near with him, symbolizing that he has gone from denying things to secretly confessing to the public. Motivated by the support from Hester and Pearl, Dimmesdale told the crowd his sin, and revealed the scarlet letter carved into his chest. At first, when Dimmesdale only wanted to protect his own reputation, Chillingworth and he built himself into a prison where he suffered more than Hester did, but by confessing, he escaped the prison and is more relieved. At the end, Dimmesdale’s confession did not save him, but allowed for Pearl to become humane, "she would grow up amid human joy and sorrow, nor forever do battle with the world, but be a woman in it”. She is not a girl who comes from sin anymore. By using Dimmesdale’s death, Hawthorne reveals that the human community is connected the strongest only when one is near his or her end. Also that confession is hard, but it will allow for an individual to become less burden with the secrets keep under his or her