In Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel "The Scarlet Letter" many aspects of evil and sin are reflected in the role of Arthur Dimmesdale and Roger Chillingworth. Dimmesdale and Chillingworth chose to be evil with sinners. Therefore, Hawthorn believes this is the definition of evil and sin; a man chooses to be an act considered guilty. Both Dimmesdale and Chillingworth depicted evil and sin, but they portrayed it in two different formats.
The greatest evil committed by a person appearing in Nathaniel Hawthorne's "red letter" is Arthur Dimmesdale. Hester Prynne and Roger Chillingworth are jealous of each other, but it is Dimmesdale who is doing evil for both. He knows he is still married, but Ding Mesdale is not only related to Hester Prynne, but he has never appeared as her sinful partner. Hester Prynne, whose husband has been missing for two years, has not proven that he is alive and alive, and is afflicted by Reimnd Dimmesdale. He was sentenced to adultery in the court of Boston, Massachusetts, was wearing the red letter "A" in his clothes, and was declared to stand on the schedule three hours a day. She would not say the name of a man who was an accomplice of her, but what he did repentance was that she acknowledged her sin and pronounced her sentence.
"A red letter" is a study on the impact of sin on Hester, Din Messdale, Chillingworth's heart. In either case, the effect is catastrophic. Once these characters become evil, they can not find a way out. Sin changed the sinner; it dims their vision and weakens the soul. Sin strengthens Hester. Sin hurts Dimmesdale's heart and soul. Sin becomes in line with the most influential Lingus, which turns him from man to devil. This shows the power and impact of sin on the human mind, and it is not something you can play, or you might end up like a Chillingworth