Final answer:
The question does not provide sufficient context to explain what Hester gives Dimmesdale or to analyze the last two lines mentioned. The rhyme pattern in poems involves the correspondence of sounds between the ends of lines.
Step-by-step explanation:
The particular excerpt, where Hester is mentioned, is not from Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter and does not provide context about what Hester gives Dimmesdale.
However, if we were discussing The Scarlet Letter, it could refer to Hester Prynne providing Rev. Dimmesdale with strength or revealing a secret, depending on the part of the novel.
As for the last two lines of a poem or a stanza, without specific lines provided, a general approach would suggest they often sum up the stanza or the poem's theme, offer a twist, or emphasize an emotion or idea. Without the actual lines, we can only speculate on their purpose.
When discussing the rhyme pattern of a poem, it involves the arrangement of rhymes in a stanza or poem. You can usually detect it by looking at the end of each line and noting the corresponding sounds that come at the end of other lines.