Chapter 22

Chapter 223,693 wordsCompleted

The chapter opens with the sound of military music announcing a grand procession moving toward the meeting‑house for the Election Sermon. A slow, stately march of magistrates, citizens, and a military escort of well‑armed gentlemen in burnished steel and bright morions fills the market‑place. Dimmesdale leads the procession, his gait unusually firm and his demeanor composed, though his mind is described as far‑removed, occupied with internal deliberations. Hester watches him with a heavy, dreary influence, recalling their secret forest encounter and feeling the distance between them widen.

Pearl at first claps to the music, then becomes solemn, later fluttering like a bird. As the procession passes, Mistress Hibbins—dressed in a triple ruff, brocaded stomacher, velvet gown, and gold‑headed cane—interrupts Hester with a feverish monologue, accusing Dimmesdale of hiding a sin, invoking “the Black Man,” and demanding that Hester confirm the minister’s guilt. Hester rebuffs her as insane; Hibbins departs with a shrill laugh, warning that Pearl will learn the truth of her father.

The meeting‑house is crowded; Hester cannot enter, so she positions herself beside the scaffold of the pillory to hear the sermon. Dimmesdale’s voice, though muffled by the walls, reaches her with a rich, melodic cadence that alternates between soaring power and plaintive anguish. The description emphasizes how the tone alone conveys a profound human sorrow, moving Hester deeply despite the unintelligible words.

Meanwhile Pearl roams the marketplace. She encounters a shipmaster—one of the swarthy seamen who had spoken with Hester earlier—who is struck by her appearance. He attempts to kiss her, fails, and throws a gold chain to her; Pearl promptly twists it around herself and asks the sailor to carry a message to her mother. Their dialogue touches on the minister’s secret hand‑over‑heart and on the “Prince of Air” legend that Mistress Hibbins had mentioned. Pearl later repeats the sailor’s taunt to Hibbins, calling him a “witch‑baby.”

The crowd, including townspeople, sailors, Indians, and other onlookers, presses close to Hester, their gazes fixed on the scarlet letter. Their presence heightens her sense of shame, yet she remains rooted near the scaffold, absorbed in Dimmesdale’s sermon. The chapter closes with Hester’s inner conflict—her spirit steadied yet strained—while Pearl continues her erratic, bright movements, and the market thrums with the combined tumult of the procession, the sermon, and the ever‑watchful eyes of the community.