Chapter 23

Chapter 233,050 wordsCompleted

After the Election Sermon the congregation pours out of the church, cheering the minister’s oratory. Reverend Dimmesdale emerges pale and trembling, his health visibly failing, and is supported by the senior clergyman, John Wilson, as he joins the celebratory procession toward the town hall. The crowd’s enthusiasm fades as they glimpse the frail preacher; his once‑radiant appearance is now “feeble and pale.” Hester Prynne, standing beside the old scaffold with her child Pearl, watches him approach. Roger Chillingworth, still intent on preventing any reconciliation, intercepts Dimmesdale and demanding he turn away from Hester, but the minister refuses, calling Chillingworth a “tempter” and insisting he must act. Dimmesdale asks Hester to come forward and support him. He grips her hand, and with Pearl clasped in his other hand, he climbs the scaffold steps. Once on the platform, he raises his voice to the assembled townspeople and declares, “Ye that have loved me…behold me here, the one sinner of the world!” He publicly acknowledges his guilt, identifies Hester as the woman who has borne his sin, and compares his secret shame to the scarlet letter she wears. In a dramatic gesture he tears off his black ministerial band, revealing a hidden red “A” on his own breast. The crowd reacts with a mixture of awe, horror, and stunned silence as the minister’s secret is exposed. Overcome by the effort, Dimmesdale collapses; Hester steadies him, supporting his head against her bosom as he breathes his final words. He forgives Chillingworth, admonishes him, and addresses Pearl, asking her to kiss him; Pearl complies, and a brief, tender moment passes between them. Dimmesdale then whispers a final farewell to Hester, expressing hope for an eternal reunion, and dies on the scaffold. Chillingworth kneels beside the corpse, repeating “Thou hast escaped me!” while the murmuring crowd stands in shocked reverence. The scene closes with the townspeople’s muted, awe‑filled murmurs echoing over Dimmesdale’s lifeless form, marking the culmination of the novel’s moral conflict.