Roger Chillingworth once said, “I have already told them what I am! A fiend!” (163). The Scarlet Letter written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the famous author in the 19th century, is a story based on sin, crime, and punishment. The story is about of a beautiful young woman from England named Hester, who is married to a man named Roger Chillingworth. Roger Chillingworth disappeared for years, but suddenly he appeared in the town that Hester lives. Chillingworth later found out that his wife had committed adultery with Dimmesdale, a minister in the Puritan town, who is the father of Hester’s newborn child, Pearl. Chillingworth’s reaction to the news that his wife cheated on him and had a child is shocking. In the unfortunate development, the reader learns that Hester and Dimmesdale are the ones that make Chillingworth do the devil’s work.
Chillingworth does devil’s work is evident from the inauguration of the novel: he as a physician with a wise looking when the first move to Boston. Everything changes after he saw his wife, Hester, holding an infant in her hand on the scaffold and serve shaming punishment. For instance, after Hester go back to jail Chillingworth said to her, “Live, therefore, and bear …show more content…
Every night Dimmesdale is head out his house and start walking to random place without having any acknowledge where the is going. Hester knows something is wrong with Dimmesdale, and she starts talking to Chillingworth about what the did to Dimmesdale. For example, Hester ask Chillingworth, “Hast thou not tortured him enough?” and he said, “No!-no!-He has but increased the debt” (163). Chillingworth keeps add up Dimmesdale debt because Dimmesdale was lying to Chillingworth when they were a best friend, and that made him feel being treachery. The only way that Dimmesdale debt is payoff is when he die because Chillingworth cannot torture him