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Person Vs. Person – Dimmesdale and Hester are afraid that he will not be able to escape from Chillingworth’s care. This is also situational irony because the beginning reason Chillingworth is watching over Dimmesdale is to help him and cure him of his sickness.…
Roger Chillingworth is the evil character in the story The Scarlet Letter. His goal is to harm the man responsible for the scarlet letter on Hester Prynne. Chillingworth obsesses over trying to find the man who had the baby with Prynne. He tracks him down and emotionally tortures him using guilt. Roger Chillingworth drives himself insane from the emotional harm he caused the man. He obsesses over Dimmsdale and torturing him for revenge. Chillingworth wasn’t willing…
Starkweather homicide David Jacobs 6th Period Contemporary History • Charles Raymond Starkweather (November 24, 1938 – June 25, • • • • • 1959) Starkweather was born in Lincoln, Nebraska He was the third of seven children born to Guy and Helen Starkweather. Starkweather had attended Saratoga Elementary School, Everett Junior High School and Lincoln High School in Lincoln.…
The inference that Chillingworth is a leech and is leeching from Dimmesdale is related to chapter nine and ten when Hawthorne describes the physician as a leech, and then related to the scenes after Dimmesdale dies. The lines at the conclusion of the story, “almost immediately after Mr. Dimmesdale's death, in the appearance and demeanour of the old man known as Roger Chillingworth. All his strength and energy--all his vital and intellectual force--seemed at once to desert him” (Hawthorne 224), shows that Chillingworth needed Dimmesdale in order to live, and that Chillingworth basically sucks the vitality out of Dimmesdale. This is not the only place where Chillingworth tortures…
First of all, the major difference between Chillingworth and Dimmesdale’s sins is their motives for doing so. When Dimmesdale has the affair with Hester, although there was no clear motive for doing so, it might have been because of love. With Chillingworth, he was only torturing Dimmesdale as revenge. Dimmesdale never planned on committing a sin like how Chillingworth deliberately planned on sinning because he had been conjuring in his mind a plan on how to…
According to Oxford Dictionary, revenge is "the action of inflicting hurt or harm on someone for an injury or wrong suffered at their hands." This is one of the Scarlet Letter's main concepts we see in the story; mostly coming from Chillingworth. We see him seek his revenge against Dimmesdale. Chillingworth is a trusted Physician in the city of Boston, where the Scarlet Letter takes place. He offers to be Dimmesdale's doctor. Dimmesdale agrees because of his condition and he trusts Chillingworth. This sets up Chillingworth's plan to avenge Dimmesdale for having sexual intercourse and a child with his wife. Not only does he set up his revenge, we also see him act on it. Chillingworth would let Dimmesdale almost die and he would hang on the border of staying alive and dying for long lengths of time. He is basically playing a big game of "Operation." What man would do such a thing! His revengefulness takes over his life. That is not the kind of life a man should…
The Leech and his Patient scene unravels Chillingworth's evil determination to revenge on Arthur Dimmesdale. Dimmesdale is already torturing himself, because the guilt of his role in adultery with Hester Prynne is eating him away. Even though Dimmesdale is ashamed of his sin, he is still unable to confess. Chillingworth is so focused on accomplishing revenge that it could be seen as a “terrible fascination”(103) Hawthorne mentions how Chillingworth “dug into the poor clergyman's heart, like a miner searching for gold”(103) which shows how obsessed and focused chillingworth is on revenge on Arthur Dimmesdale rather than Hester Prynne. Hawthorne refers to Chillingworth's reputation as once a "pure and upright man."(103) however, this actually…
“ The physician advanced directly in front of his patient laid his hand upon his bosom, and thrust aside the vestment that, hither to, had always covered it even from the professional eye.” This was when Chillingworth found the “A” on his back. Dimmesdale did this because he wanted to repent for his sins. His sin was getting Hester pregnant and not being there for them for 7…
In order to fully understand and empathize with Chillingworth, the reader must consider things from his point of view, climb into his skin and walk around in it. It was common in Puritan times for couples to wed for money and security rather than for love. Many of these loveless marriages were successful. In addition, Chillingworth’s “torments” towards Hester and Dimmesdale were out of passion towards his wife. He, like any other man, felt it necessary to remain close to his wife, regardless of the lack of love felt between them. Yes, Chillingworth did turn into a bit of a devil in the end, lusting after vengeance towards Dimmesdale. But Dimmesdale turned into a floppy, soggy, mush of fabric, unable to support himself. Chillingworth was still able to support himself, and properly chase after and acquire his goal. Dimmesdale was…
This idea of Dimmesdale being the child’s father and is eating away at Chillingworth making him seem more distraught and evil than before. As the townspeople find the knowledge that Dimmesdale is progressively getting worse, they start to doubt Chillingworth and his ability to get Dimmesdale back to good health.”Yea, woman, thou sayest truly!” cried old Roger Chillingworth, letting the Lurid fire of his heart blaze out before her eyes,”’which shows how Chillingworth seemed as if he had fire in his heart which made him evil. Chillingworth’s appearance has become even more evil than before and Dimmesdale begins to fear Chillingworth. Chillingworth’s want for revenge has made him look more evil and act as if he had been an evil…
Chillingworth does into terrible emotional conditionand health as a result of his poor decisions and bad priorities. When Dimmesdale dies, hehas no reason to live and then dies. His death was a resulted from his devotion to evil,cruel decisions. All of his passion was put towards his single, evil goal; when that goalwas taken away, he no longer had the will to live. Ahab’s devotion to getting revengemotivated him to foolishly pursue and hunt Moby Dick, when he had little chance ofsuccess or even survival. He died in his hunt of his worst enemy.These actions demonstrate that Chillingworth and Ahab are both evil-natured menwith evil motives. Their revenge-driven minds caused their deaths and affect others. Theyhave differences; however, their evil-natures share significant similarities as…
However, as disappointed as he was that Hester committed adultery, he felt more anger against the person who lay down with Hester. This is possibly due to jealousy because the person who did this with Hester was able to get her to love him, while Chillingworth in all his attempts was not able to get her to love him. Chillingworth stated that he plans to find the man, and when he does, he does not want to report him to the authorities. The reason he gives for this is that if he tells on the man who committed adultery with Hester he says it would be, “to mine own loss, betray him to the gripe of human law.” In other words, the betrayer’s consequences would be at the hand of proper authorities, and not in the control of Chillingworth. This shows a very depressing, vengeful future for Chillingworth instead of the positive one that he had been hoping for. It is very plain to see that Chillingworth changes greatly after the finds Hester on the…
Hawthorne says that Chillingworth, being a man of skill, dove into the intellect of Dimmesdale looking for secrets and precious thoughts that might help him in the magnification of Dimmesdale’s guilt (114). The passage on 114 says nothing about Chillingworth wanting to kill Dimmesdale. Another part in the novel again suggests that Chillingworth had no intentions of poisoning Dimmesdale. During the last scaffold scene when Dimmesdale finally resolves to let his guilt be known to the town, Chillingworth says, “There was no one place so secret… where thou couldst have escaped me, --save on this very scaffold”(Hawthorne 230-231)! If Chillingworth were in fact slowly poisoning Dimmesdale to death, there would have truly been no place in the world where Dimmesdale could have escaped from Chillingworth not even on the…
This terrible hate ultimately consumes Chillingworth to a death one short year after Dimmesdale passing. It is so strange that hate and love can be related this way. The same thing is seen in the Sith in the Star Wars films. One main character turns the dark side where hate and anger are the keys to power in attempt to save his loved one. The somewhat same thing happened to Chillingworth in the novel. He loved Hester, but turned to hate her and Dimmesdale because of their relationship. Anakin Skywalker ultimately dies because of his hatred too. As said by Claudia Durst Johnson in her article The Meaning of the Scarlet A -“Chillingworth’s evil character- like something right out of melodrama- if also reflected in his physical appearance”. In Star Wars, as Anakin becomes more evil, he loses two legs and an arm, and becomes horribly scarred by burns. Chillingworth’s and Anakin Skywalker’s hate and greed both overpowered they often do. But, at the end of Star Wars Anakin makes up for his calamitous ways by killing the source of his evil, Emperor Palpatine. Chillingworth also performs a similar act in which he gives Pearl, his wife’s daughter all his wealth and land in England and the New World. Both characters allied with evil for good reasons but also came forth to their good nature in the…
During the conversation between Hester and the physician, Chillingworth is aware of his continuing torture of Dimmesdale when he says “[Dimmesdale] has been conscious of me. He has felt an influence dwelling always upon him like a curse” (Hawthorne 155). This proves that he enjoys his obsession with the minister. He continues to cold-heartedly torment the frailing Dimmesdale. On the night that Chillingworth sees Dimmesdale’s chest, Chillingworth has a moment of “ecstasy” during which he understands “how Satan comports himself when a precious human soul is lost to heaven” (Hawthorne 126). Chillingworth begins to develop an understanding of the way the devil feels when he successfully tortures his victims in hell. His ability to empathize with Satan explains why Hester and the rest of the town views him as a psychopath. Throughout this section of the book, the ex-husband who was wronged now embodies…