Character Summery On Roger Chillingworth From The Scarlet Letter

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Character Summery on Roger Chillingworth from The Scarlet Letter Roger Chillingworth, a prominent character in The Scarlet Letter, is a man deficient in human warmth, as his name would suggest. Hunched, deformed shoulders mirror the man he really is, and his soul. From what the reader is told of his marital life with Hester, he was a demanding husband. Ignoring his wife for much of the time, Chillingworth expected her to show him her ardor and affection whenever he condescended to spend time with her. Hawthorn's decision to have Chillingworth assume the identity of a doctor, or “leach,” is fitting for his sly, cunning, and depraved demeanor. Roger, unable to immerse himself in trusting relationships, feeds on the vivacity of those around him as a way of invigorating himself so as to reach his ultimate goals. Chillingworth’s death, a result of Dimmesdale's, provides insight towards this aspect of his character. After Dimmesdale, the victim of his revenge, dies, Chillingworth losses his will to live, and, like a leech, withers and dies. Roger Chillingworth is a brilliant and revolutionary man who's views on subjects such as medicine are affected by the natives which whom he lived with and alchemy. These ideas, like most aspects of his essence, are frowned upon by the Puritan society. Chillingworth slowly progresses from a middle-aged, wise, physician, to a malignant wraith. Physically, he becomes more bent on the death of those who have wronged him, while at the same time he also becomes more conniving in his thoughts. Chillingworth uses many herbal and alchemical ingredients in his remedies, including those which he gives Hester and Pearl when he first visits them in their confines. "My old studies in alchemy, and my sojourn, for above a year past, among a people well versed in kindly properties of simpleness, have made a better physician

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