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Blogging The Scarlet Letter: Part 5 (Chapters 9-10)

Previously in Blogging The Scarlet Letter,  Hester got invited to a devil  party and Dimmesdale was Captain Obvious.

Find every installment here!

Chapter 9: The Leech*

Brace yourselves: there is no dialogue in this chapter.

Roger Chillingworth, if you’ll remember from last time, is bearing  a greater semblance to  Gollum  than ever before. He  has glo’d down, so to speak.

As much as I hate to say it, Roger is a great physician  by Puritan standards, and Hester’s community  welcomes him like a saint. (As long as that saint was canonized by the Protestants and not the Roman Catholics.) He may be  good at his job, but I can’t help feeling  he’s a little Bob Kelso-esque.


Smiles never reach his eyes. Scrubs / ABC

A  few things happen almost simultaneously. Some of these events we already know about, but they’re reiterated here:

  1. Chillingworth rolls into town.
  2. Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale  starts looking sicker  than anyone had ever seen him.
  3. Hester does scaffold time for adultery.
  4. Chillingworth goes Jerry Springer to  find out who the father of  Hester’s baby is.
  5. He adopts Arthur Dimmesdale  as his “spiritual guide.”
  6. Dimmesdale adopts Chillingworth as his personal physician.

Are these coincidences? I can say with conviction: maybe.

In any case, the community is desperate for  their minister with the lats  of David Hasselhoff  and the voice of  Morgan Freeman  to make a speedy recovery, for religion purposes.

Here’s what happens next:  Chillingworth and Dimmesdale start spending a lot of time together.  They take long walks on the beach.  Chillingworth  strives “to go deep into his patient’s bosom […] like a treasure-seeker in a dark cavern.”  (What?)  Many women flirt with Dimmesdale  but  he turns them down to discuss existential questions with Chillingworth  over pancakes.  They  MOVE IN TOGETHER.

Roger and Art  in their Massachusetts home – Movieclips / Youtube

The only thing I embellished on was the pancakes. I’m not insinuating anything, but I’m also not not  insinuating anything, because  there is Chillingworth/Dimmesdale fan fiction on the internet and if we’re being  honest it writes itself.

via GIPHY

The “official” reason given for this canoodling is that Chillingworth can only treat his patient  if he gets to know him inside and out—for  “wherever there is a heart and an intellect, the diseases of the physical frame are tinged with the peculiarities of these.” Is this a NYTimes Wellness Blog piece  on the health benefits of mindfulness?  Maybe Dimmesdale should try meditation. Or eating his salted meats with  intention.

Dimmesdale looks worse than ever  and keeps putting  his hand over his heart, wincing in pain.* I’m not a doctor, but I do know the symptoms of  acid reflux and would recommend two  Tums and avoiding spicy foods.

Chillingworth doesn’t look much better: “Now, there was something ugly and evil in his face, with [the townspeople] that not previously noticed, and which grew still the more obvious to sight.” There is no antacid  for evil.

The chapter concludes with:

To sum up the matter, it grew to be a widely diffused opinion, that the Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale, like many other personages of especial sanctity, in all ages of the Christian world, was haunted by either Satan himself, or Satan’s emissary, in the guise of old Roger Chillingworth. This diabolical agent had the Divine permission, for a season, to burrow into the clergyman’s intimacy, and plot against his soul.

O_O

*This actually seems important.

Chapter 10: The Leech and His Patient

I can summarize the first half  of this in a paraphrased conversation that takes place in Chillingworth’s laboratory:

Dimmesdale: Where did you find that unusual-looking plant?
Chillingworth: On an unmarked grave, which tells me that  the person buried there died without confessing his  most unforgivable  sin.
Dimmesdale: How do you know that?
Chillingworth:  Science.
Dimmesdale: Well have you ever thought  about how he probably WANTED to confess this sin but COULDN’T
Chillingworth: One always  feels  much better when  one confesses to one’s  most terrible sin.
Dimmesdale:
Chillingworth:  By “one,” I mean people in general, but also you specifically.
Dimmesdale: Sometimes one doesn’t  want to be judged.
Chillingworth: Is there something you’re not telling me?
Dimmesdale: Yes. I mean NO. No.
Chillingworth: All I’m saying is, if you sinned, then Satan’s got a choke hold on one of  your humors and that’s why you look like you got hit by a bus.
Dimmesdale:  RUDE

It’s worth noting  that as this  convo goes down, Hester and Pearl make a detour through their backyard.  Chillingworth mentions to Dimmesdale that he “saw [Pearl], the other day, bespatter the Governor himself with water, at the cattle-trough in Spring Lane.”  RETRIBUTION!!! I feel like a proud mom.

Dimmesdale rushes out of the room. He does this “with a frantic gesture,” which I want to say looked like this.  Chillingworth says “you’ll be back” with a signature Nicholas Cage smile, but unlike King George and the Continental Congress  they reconcile a few hours later.

A short time after the incident, Dimmesdale falls asleep at his desk reading “a large [book] open before him on the table.” Why has he  fallen asleep? The answer lies in the most meta sentence  I have ever read in my short time  on earth:

It must have been a work of vast ability in the somniferous school of literature.

It must have been, Nathaniel Hawthorne. It must have been.

Anyway, even though Dimmesdale  usually sleeps “as fitful as a small bird hopping on a twig,” he is currently  seven levels deep in his REM cycle. Chillingworth uses the opportunity to walk  right up to him, lay his hand on his patient’s chest, and “thrust aside” his shirt.

What does he discover? Something that makes Hawthorne describe his  facial expression as a GHASTLY RAPTURE:

Had a man seen old Roger Chillingworth, at that moment of his ecstasy, he would have had no need to ask how Satan comports himself when a precious human soul is lost to heaven, and won into his kingdom.

Not that I’m absolutely counting, but that’s two consecutive  chapters that have ended with direct comparisons between  the doctor and Satan.

Thoughts/conclusions:

  • It’s really starting to feel like Nathaniel Hawthorne just discovered dramatic  irony and wrote this book to practice it.
  • Centuries ago, *”leech” was just another word for a physician. Chillingworth is a leech in two senses: he is a physician, but also he  is literally sucking the life out of Dimmesdale.
  • The sentence “Her matronly frame was trodden under all men’s feet”  feels so relevant right now.
  • What is going on underneath Dimmesdale’s shirt? Join me next time to find out if Chillingworth is off his rocker or if Dimmesdale just has an out-of-control amount of chest hair.

Find the next chapter and every installment  of Blogging Scarlet Letter HERE, and an index of all our  Blogging the Classics titles HERE.