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How Does Chillingworth's Mental State

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For many generations, people would presume a person’s mental, emotional, or moral state by just taking a quick glance at them. In The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hawthorne presents the characters in which their physical appearances closely resembles their mental, emotional, or moral state. The Scarlet letter starts off by introducing Hester who has committed adultery, which is a terrible offense in the Puritan community. As the story progresses, Dimmesdale who had committed this offense with Hester was suffering from his unpunished actions, as he learns that Chillingworth was planning to get revenge on Hester for committing adultery. However, towards the end Dimmesdale confesses and ruins Chillingworth’s plots for revenge. Hawthorne uses Dimmesdale, Chillingworth, and Hester to support the idea about the correlation between physical appearances and mental, …show more content…

While being talked about by Hawthorne, “Roger Chillingworth - a deformed old figure, with a face that haunted men's memories longer than they liked”(178). Chillingworth is a old man who frightens many, because of his appearance, his face that haunts many, describes his mental state as vengeful and hateful. When meeting with Hester in his office, “For thy hatred has transformed a wise and just man into a fiend. Wilt thou purge it out of thee and become once more human?” (177). Chillingworth was a wise person that was pure and innocent, however the sin Hester committed made him have only hatred. His mental state has been overcome with thoughts of just getting his revenge, that he has lost all human morals, as his physical appearance is such as monster. Chillingworth has lost his humanity and has been only interested in revenge, he’s being described as a monster, that his appearance alone is enough to haunt any man. His mental state was greatly change as also people’s point of view of

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