Chapter 20

Chapter 203,836 wordsCompleted

After leaving the forest, Reverend Dimmesdale walks back toward Boston. The streets and houses appear exactly as they were, yet he feels that a single day has altered his consciousness as though years had passed. He pauses before his own church, uncertain whether he is dreaming or recalling a dream.

Continuing, he encounters an elderly deacon who greets him with paternal warmth. Dimmesdale feels a sudden, blasphemous impulse to speak profane thoughts about the communion‑supper, but he controls himself, trembling and turning pale.

Soon after, he meets a venerable, widowed female parishioner. When he prepares to comfort her with Scripture, his mind produces only a terse, doubtful argument against the immortality of the soul. He fears that uttering such a notion would kill her, and he mutters something incomprehensible before fleeing the encounter.

Next, a young maiden, recently converted by Dimmesdale’s preaching, approaches. He experiences a fierce temptation to corrupt her innocence, visualizing himself planting a “seed of evil” in her heart. He resists, covering his face with his cloak and hurrying away.

Further along, a group of small Puritan children play nearby, and Dimmesdale feels an urge to teach them wicked words. He also meets a drunken seaman from the Spanish Main and briefly entertains the idea of joining the sailor in coarse jokes, but he restrains himself out of clerical decorum.

Overwhelmed, he questions his sanity, striking his forehead. At that moment Mistress Hibbins, the reputed witch, passes by in an elaborate gown and high ruff. She remarks on his recent forest visit and promises a secret midnight conversation about a “potentate.” Dimmesdale reels, fearing he has bargained with the devil.

He finally reaches his study, the familiar room of books, a fireplace, and a tapestry. On its desk lies a partially written Election Sermon, its sentence broken mid‑thought. He compares his former self, who drafted the sermon two days earlier, with his present self, who feels wiser yet haunted by hidden mysteries.

Roger Chillingworth, now the town physician and Hester’s concealed husband, enters. He greets Dimmesdale warmly, offers medicines to strengthen him for the upcoming Election Sermon, and probes subtly about Dimmesdale’s health. Dimmesdale, feeling no physical weakness, politely declines the physician’s aid and hints that he needs no further remedies.

Dimmesdale summons a servant, eats a large meal, and, with renewed vigor, tears the pages of his unfinished sermon and throws them into the fire. He then begins a new sermon, writing with an impulsive flow that he perceives as divinely inspired, though he doubts the purity of the instrument. He works through the night, the sunrise eventually casting a golden beam across his study as he continues writing.

Thus the chapter concludes with Dimmesdale poised on the brink of delivering his Election Sermon, his mind a battlefield of guilt, temptation, and a desperate search for redemption.»