Roger Chillingworth wants revenge on Reverend Dimmesdale for having an affair with Hester Prynne. He seeks to torment Dimmesdale as he believes Dimmesdale is partly responsible for the shame and suffering that Hester endured. Chillingworth aims to expose Dimmesdale's guilt and hypocrisy.
Roger Chillingworth was Hester Prynne's husband. This is not actually his real name. He changed it to Roger Chillingworth because he did not want to live with the shame of having an unfaithful wife. Roger Chillingworth is a scholar who also knows both European and Indian medicines.
Chillingworth wanted to know the name of the man with whom she committed adultery, Dimmesdale.
Roger Chillingworth is Mr. Dimmesdale's physician. His real name is not actually Roger Chillingworth, but changed it to be so, so that nobody would find out that he's Hester's husband who has been gone for so long. He also does not want to be associated badly because of her sin. So, he poses as Dimmesdale's physician, while, for the most part, he's mostly looking for the dark secrets of Dimmesdale's heart and mind.
Chillingworth wants revenge on Dimmesdale and wants to continue tormenting him. He sees Dimmesdale's public confession as a potential end to his suffering and manipulation over him. Chillingworth sees Dimmesdale's confession as a threat to his power and control over the situation.
Yes. She tells Dimmesdale to come out on the scaffolding with them during the day for eveyone to see. She knows he is trying to hide something on his chest when he puts his hand over his heart.
Chillingworth ultimately seeks to destroy Dimmesdale's soul in Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter." He is consumed by a desire for revenge against Dimmesdale, whom he believes has wronged him by having an affair with his wife, Hester Prynne. Through psychological torment and manipulation, Chillingworth aims to ensure Dimmesdale's spiritual and emotional destruction.
Yes, Chillingworth does try to persuade Hester not to reveal his identity to Dimmesdale. He does this because he wants to continue manipulating Dimmesdale's guilt for his own revenge. Chillingworth believes that it is in his best interest for his true identity to remain hidden.
No, Hester did not love Chillingworth. Their marriage was based on duty rather than love, and Hester's heart belonged to another man, Arthur Dimmesdale. Chillingworth's obsession with seeking revenge on Dimmesdale further strained his relationship with Hester.
Chillingworth doesn't want his true identity to be known so that he can sneak around and figure out who Pearl's father is without suspicion. If the town knew who he was, he wouldn't be able to do so.
Chillingworth is Hester's Husband. He doesn't want the towns people to know because he will be labeled as the sinner's husband that no one knew of. So instead he changed his name to Chillingworth and is in town to find the man who impregnated Hester.
Chillingworth wanted his identity hidden for a couple of reasons. One, he didn't want people to know that Hester had committed adultery against him. It would put him a light that he didn't want. Secondly, he wanted to be able to take out revenge against the man Hester committed adultery with. If he was labeled as Hester's husband, everyone would know about his intentions.
The stranger, Roger Chillingworth, is Hester's husband. He does not want people to know that he is her husband.