Roder Chillingworth
He thinks that Dimmesdale is going to tell everyone about him being Hester's husband.
Pearl and Hester do join dimmesdale in his vigil.
Before he dies, Dimmesdale stands on the scaffold with Hester and Pearl in front of the townspeople. When he does this, he reveals that it was he who committed the sin of adultery with Hester...
Dimmesdale ascends the scaffold to publicly confess his sins and seek redemption for his guilt. The act is both a form of catharsis for Dimmesdale and a way to publicly acknowledge his role in Hester's shame.
In the marketplace, on the scaffold where Hester Prynne had previously stood with her baby as a punishment for her sin. This is where Dimmesdale finally confesses his own guilt and reveals the scarlet letter A on his chest.
Chillingworth climbs the scaffold to witness Dimmesdale's public confession and moment of anguish. He wants to observe Dimmesdale's downfall and suffering as revenge for the affair with Hester Prynne. It is symbolic of the emotional and psychological torment that Chillingworth inflicts on Dimmesdale throughout the novel.
In the book, The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne is sentenced to wear the red letter, A. This marks her as an adulterer, for sleeping with the pastor Arthur Dimmesdale.
Mr. Dimmesdale goes to the scaffold in the marketplace at midnight to publicly confess his sin of adultery with Hester Prynne. This act is a way for him to seek redemption and relieve himself of the guilt he has been carrying.
One example of foreshadowing is when Chillingworth is talking to Hester in the dungeon. He keeps saying "He will be known! He will be known! He will be known!" Here, Chillingworth is talking about how he will find out who the father of Hester's child is, as this is the man who wronged both Chillingworth and Hester. Another example is some of the scaffold scenes. In the second scaffold scene, which takes place at night, Dimmesdale, Hester, and Pearl stand on the scaffold together holding hands. Pearl asks Dimmesdale if they will stand on the scaffold together the next day, in which Dimmesdale replies that they will another day, but not tomorrow. This foreshadows the last scaffold scene, where Dimmesdale calls Hester and Pearl to the scaffold during the Election Procession.
Hester Prynne found Arthur Dimmesdale's lost property, which was a glove, on the scaffold where they had their secret meeting.
During the procession, Hester stands on the scaffold in the marketplace with her daughter Pearl. During Dimmesdale's sermon in the church, she stands in the back of the congregation, unseen by the rest of the town.
The window at Chillingworth and Dimmesdale's home overlooks the scaffold where Hester Prynne stood for her public shaming. The scaffold serves as a constant reminder of the characters' past sins and the consequences of their actions in "The Scarlet Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne.