Chapter 15

Chapter 152,273 wordsCompleted

After Roger Chillingworth stoops away gathering herbs, Hester watches him for a moment, then bitterly declares “I hate the man!” and reflects on the years of torment the scarlet letter has caused her, recalling past evenings with Chillingworth in their home and accusing him of having betrayed her. She summons her daughter, Pearl, and calls her from wherever she is playing. Pearl’s lively seaside activities are described in detail: she first flirts with her own reflection in a pool, then fashions miniature birch‑bark boats and loads them with snailshells, attempts to sail them, seizes a live horseshoe by its tail, makes five‑finger prizes, places a jelly‑fish in the sun, gathers white sea‑foam to toss into the wind, hops from rock to rock pelting a flock of beach‑birds with pebbles, accidentally injures a gray bird with a broken wing and, feeling remorse, stops the game. She then collects seaweed, weaves it into a scarf, mantle, and head‑dress, and using eel‑grass creates a green “A” on her bosom, mimicking her mother’s scarlet letter but in a fresh hue. Pearl asks Hester what the green letter means, then questions the meaning of the scarlet “A” on Hester’s chest, the reason the minister keeps his hand over his heart, and repeatedly presses for an explanation. Hester gives a vague answer, claiming the letter is “the great letter A” taught in a horn‑book and that she wears it “for the sake of its gold thread,” but she cannot satisfy Pearl’s curiosity. The dialogue continues with Pearl’s earnest hand‑holding and repeated inquiries, culminating in Hester’s frustrated admonition to “hold thy tongue” and threaten to lock Pearl in a dark closet if she persists. Throughout the exchange Hester internally evaluates Pearl’s character—her precociousness, imaginative play, nascent moral sense, and possible role as a “spirit messenger” who might alleviate her mother’s sorrow. Hester’s thoughts turn to the broader implications of Pearl’s nature, her own sin, and the potential for redemption, but no concrete resolution is reached by the chapter’s end.