What Does Chillingworth Symbolize In The Scarlet Letter

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Hawthorne’s excessive use of symbolism in The Scarlet Letter was intended to add depth and a theme to the novel. The author has constructed Rodger Chillingworth to represent malevolence in the story. Chillingworth experiences several dark changes throughout the novel. Chillingworth’s dexterity, animosity, and sadism produced demonic actions which lead him to damnation.
Chillingworth possesses the supreme intellect of The Scarlet Letter. When acumen is not supported by the other attributes of a hominid, spirit, emotion, and physical body, wickedness is created. Chillingworth’s absence of the other components subjects that he uses his intelligence to inflict evil. (Hawthorn, 57) “There was a remarkable intelligence in his features, as of a …show more content…

Vengeance became Chillingworth’s primary motivation and driving force. (Hawthorn, 153) “Who had grown to exist only by this perpetual poison of the direst revenge”, “there was a fiend at his elbow”! These excerpts from the novel are included to express Chillingworth’s motivation and support from demons. (Reid, 253) "Chillingworth reacts to the sight of his wife with a child with a repulsion physically manifested as a 'writhing horror' that twists 'itself across his features, like a snake gliding swiftly over them.'”. This becomes the turning point of Chillingworth’s personality. Chillingworth was a once lost man, who hoped to start a family, then he transforms into an individual who is so cultivated in the idea of revenge that it is his only reason for his existence. (Reiss, 201) "Chillingworth does not want Arthur Dimmesdale to repent; the vengeful Chillingworth desires the minister to become more sinful, more hypocritical, as evidence of his damnation". The physician views himself as the martyr of an evil that the minister casted of him by destroying his hopes and dreams of having a family and uses that thought to bolster his

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