Introduces the prison door in early Boston, its surrounding overgrown yard and a blooming rose‑bush at the threshold, establishing the opening scene and symbolic contrast.
Hester Prynne is escorted from the jail into the Boston market‑place, proudly displaying a lavish scarlet “A” embroidered on her gown; the crowd—especially a group of outspoken women—debates her punishment as she proceeds to the pillory, where she stands with her infant under the eyes of town officials.
A mysterious stranger, accompanied by an Indian, arrives at the market‑place, questions the townspeople about Hester Prynne’s absent husband and the father of her infant; Governor Bellingham, Rev. John Wilson, and the young Rev. Dimmesdale confront Hester, urging her to reveal the name of her co‑sinner, which she steadfastly refuses, leading to her removal back to prison.
Physician Roger Chillingworth, revealed as Hester’s estranged husband, enters the prison, administers alchemical medicines to the infant and to Hester, extracts a secret oath of silence regarding the child’s father, and threatens future vengeance while declaring his intent to uncover the hidden man.
Hester settles in an isolated thatched cottage on the peninsula, sustains herself and Pearl by needle‑work, receives tacit permission from the magistrates, and her embroidery becomes prized for ceremonial dress while she remains socially ostracized.
Pearl’s volatile temperament and obsessive focus on Hester’s scarlet “A” are detailed, including her shifting beauty, alienation from other children, imaginative “witch‑like” play, and a pivotal scene where she repeatedly tosses flowers at the letter, leading to a tense dialogue about her origin.
Hester and Pearl travel to Governor Bellingham’s mansion to contest the plan to remove Pearl; they are admitted, view an opulent interior with stucco, armor, and portraits, and observe a garden while Governor and his gentlemen approach.
Magistrates at Governor Bellingham’s mansion debate taking Pearl from Hester; Rev. Dimmesdale passionately argues to keep mother and child together; Bellingham orders Pearl remain with Hester but to receive catechism and future schooling; Mistress Hibbins appears and invites Hester to a witch‑meeting, which Hester refuses.
Roger Chillingworth, Hester’s concealed husband, arrives in Boston under an assumed name, becomes the town physician, forms a close yet manipulative relationship with Reverend Dimmesdale, and takes up residence in a widowed woman’s house, prompting growing suspicion of his motives among the townspeople.
Chillingworth deepens his psychological assault on Dimmesdale, engaging in a prolonged debate about hidden sin and the duty of confession, then clandestinely examines a sleeping Dimmesdale, sensing the minister’s secret and reacting with ecstatic triumph.
Dimmesdale’s inner torment intensifies as Chillingworth’s psychological manipulation forces the minister into secret self‑flagellation, extreme fasting, and night vigils; he battles a self‑generated duality of public reverence and private guilt, experiences vivid hallucinations of angels, demons, his mother, Hester, and Pearl, and ultimately leaves his study at night dressed as for worship, seeking a fleeting escape.
Dimmesdale spends a night on the scaffold, imagines Hester and Pearl joining him, witnesses a meteor he reads as a letter A, is seized by Chillingworth and led away, then preaches a remarkable sermon the next day; a black glove is found on the scaffold, prompting talk of the portent.
Hester, after witnessing Dimmesdale’s weakened state, resolves to actively aid him, reflects on her evolving reputation as a charitable outcast, contemplates the broader fate of women, and decides to confront Roger Chillingworth; the chapter ends with Hester spotting Chillingworth gathering medicinal herbs.
Hester confronts Roger Chillingworth, now working as a physician, who reveals his obsessive vengeance against the minister, claims he has prolonged the minister’s suffering, mentions a council debate over removing her scarlet letter, declares he cannot grant any pardon, and then leaves to continue gathering herbs.
Hester’s hatred toward Chillingworth intensifies after his departure; she and Pearl engage in a vivid series of seaside games, Pearl fashions a green “A” on her chest, and repeatedly interrogates Hester about the scarlet letter and the minister’s hand‑over‑heart, exposing Pearl’s precocious curiosity and deepening the mother‑daughter dynamic.