The Scarlet Letter By Nathaniel Hawthorne

1436 Words3 Pages

Normally when most people think of vampires, they envision a deathly, pale creature with fangs. But Thomas Foster seems to think differently, who argues that it is not necessary for a vampire to embody a stereotypical vampire. Surprisingly enough, even humans can be these types of monsters. From Foster 's perspective, being a vampire not only includes an individual 's aesthetics, but also their actions, personality, intent, and overall representation of personal identity. The classic novel, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, presents an excellent example of this occurrence, where the character Roger Chillingworth meets the criteria of a vampiric figure, based on Thomas Foster 's ideas of vampirism, found in his book How to Read Literature Like a Professor.
By marrying Hester Prynne, Roger Chillingworth has a negative impact on her life. Therefore, Thomas Foster’s idea that a vampire “...violates young women, leaves his mark on them, steals their innocence—and...usefulness...if you think ‘marriageability’...” (Foster 16), applies specifically to Roger Chillingworth, due to the matrimonial bonds that link him to Hester Prynne. For instance, when Hester Prynne recalls her pasts memories with her husband, she deliberates, “...it seemed a fouler offence committed by Roger Chillingworth, than any which had since been done him, that, in the time when her heart knew no better, he had persuaded her to fancy herself happy by his side,” (Hawthorne 146). As noted in the beginning of The Scarlet
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Letter, Hester Prynne mentions that never loves Roger Chillingworth, (Hawthorne 63). As a consequence, in Hester Prynne’s eyes, her marriage is a false relationship. But afterwards, when her husband hides the reality of their relati...

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...l is unworthy of heaven, which also means that he does not depict any aspect of morality. Ultimately, the negative portrayal of Roger Chillingworth’s character distinguishes him as a vampire.
After analyzing The Scarlet Letter, Roger Chillingworth is the ideal vampiric figure, supporting Thomas Foster’s perspective about vampirism from his book, How to Read Literature Like a Professor. In fact, Roger Chillingworth, presents many instances of how vampires might act and appear in literature. Even though he is not a literal vampire, it does not
Randhawa 6 mean that he is any less of a vampire. Instead, it is important to understand that he is a vampire, in a metaphorical sense, representative of abstract concepts. For this reason, it is particularly important to look beyond the stereotyped vampire and realize vampires come in more than one given form.

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