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Chapter 143,757 wordsCompleted

In the dark early‑May night Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale, driven by remorse and cowardice, returns to the weather‑worn scaffold where Hester Prynne was once displayed. He climbs the steps, fearing that his secret act of penance might be discovered. The town sleeps, but ghostly lantern light reveals Governor Bellingham and his sister Mistress Hibbins watching from windows, heightening his sense of unseen scrutiny. A lantern carried by Reverend John Wilson passes the scaffold; Dimmesdale imagines a conversation that proves to be a hallucination. Cold and trembling, he worries that dawn will expose him on the place of shame.

Suddenly Hester and her daughter Pearl arrive. Dimmesdale calls them to the scaffold; they ascend together, forming an electric bond. Pearl’s innocent questions about staying together “to‑morrow at noon” clash with Dimmesdale’s terror of public exposure. A bright meteor streaks across the sky, illuminating the town and, in Dimmesdale’s mind, forming a gigantic red letter “A,” a personal omen of his hidden scarlet guilt.

While he gazes upward, he becomes aware of a dark figure near the scaffold: Roger Chillingworth, the vengeful physician and Hester’s estranged husband. Chillingworth approaches, feigning concern for Dimmesdale’s health and offering to escort him home. Exhausted and frightened, Dimmesdale accepts and is led away.

The following Sabbath, despite his nocturnal turmoil, Dimmesdale delivers the most powerful sermon of his career, moving the congregation profoundly. As he descends the pulpit, a sexton presents him with a black glove found on the scaffold, joking that Satan left it as a jest. The sexton mentions townspeople’s talk of the night’s “red A” in the sky, interpreting it as an angelic sign linked to Governor Winthrop’s death, adding another layer of superstition to Dimmesdale’s psychological burden.

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Added the copyright and disclaimer notice for the electronic edition of The Scarlet Letter, stating that Pennsylvania State University, editor Jim Manis, Sony Connect Inc., and their affiliates assume no responsibility for the material or its electronic transmission, and providing the copyright years (2004, 2007) and ISBN 978-1-4340-0086-6. Added a detailed overview of the narrator’s autobiographical sketch of his three‑year tenure as Surveyor of the Salem Custom‑House, the discovery of the scarlet “A” and related manuscripts, and his reflections on family heritage, municipal decay, and political change, all of which provide the material for The Scarlet Letter. Added description of the opening scene: an aged oak-and‑iron prison door in early Boston, its overgrown courtyard, and a wild rose‑bush at the threshold that the narrator plucks as a symbolic “sweet moral blossom” to temper the tale of human frailty and sorrow. Hester Prynne is led from the prison to the market‑place, displayed on a pillory scaffold wearing the embroidered scarlet “A,” while a crowd of townspeople, magistrates, the governor, clergy and schoolchildren watches the public punishment. A mysterious foreign stranger, accompanied by an Indian, arrives at the scaffold and asks the townspeople about Hester Prynne, predicting that the guilty man will soon be known. Governor Bellingham, Reverend John Wilson, and the young minister Arthur Dimmesdale appear on the balcony and press Hester to name her lover; she refuses and is led back to prison. Roger Chillingworth, a physician and Hester's secret husband, arrives in the prison, treats Hester and her infant with herbal remedies, vows to discover the identity of Hester's lover, and extracts Hester's promise to keep his identity secret. Hester exits prison and establishes herself in a remote thatched cottage on the peninsula, supporting herself and her infant through needle‑work that reaches the governor, ministers and other elite; she endures continual public shame, profound isolation, and an inner sense that the scarlet letter both torments and oddly heightens her perception of others’ sins. Hester closely observes Pearl’s development, describing the child’s extraordinary beauty, erratic temperament, fascination with the scarlet letter, and alienation from other children, while Hester struggles to discipline her and confronts the child's wild, almost demonic behavior. Hester Prynne seeks Governor Bellingham’s protection for her child Pearl, fearing a plot to remove the infant on the grounds of demonic origin. She brings Pearl, now a strikingly beautiful child dressed in a crimson velvet tunic that echoes the scarlet “A.” The pair confronts the Governor’s lavish mansion, observes the glittering hall, armor, and gardens, and await the Governor’s arrival, setting up a confrontation over Pearl’s fate. Governor Bellingham hosts a meeting at his estate where the magistrates debate taking Pearl from Hester; Hester defends her child, Dimmesdale supports her, and the council decides to leave Pearl with her mother under religious instruction; Mistress Hibbins appears with a dark invitation. Roger Chillingworth, now a physician in Boston, befriends the ailing minister Arthur Dimmesdale, using his medical skill to probe the minister’s hidden sin while the town whispers of Chillingworth’s dark past and diabolical nature. Chillingworth’s obsession with uncovering Reverend Dimmesdale’s hidden sin deepens, turning his medical care into a relentless psychological hunt. Dimmesdale’s internal conflict is explored through a philosophical dialogue with Chillingworth and a brief, symbolic glimpse of Pearl, highlighting themes of concealed guilt, the intertwining of spiritual and physical illness, and the corrosive pleasure the “leech” derives from probing another’s conscience. Added psychological analysis of Chillingworth's deepening vengeance and Dimmesdale's internal torment, highlighting the interplay of hidden guilt, public reverence, and self‑punishment. Dimmesdale spends a sleepless night on the scaffold, confronts his guilt, witnesses Hester and Pearl, sees a meteor‑shaped “A,” and is approached by Chillingworth before delivering a powerful sermon the next day.

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