The Scarlet Letter
The Scarlet Letter
The Scarlet Letter
Nathaniel Hawthorne
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The Scarlet Letter
EDITOR’S NOTE
Nathaniel Hawthorne was already a man of forty-six,
and a tale writer of some twenty-four years’ standing,
when ‘The Scarlet Letter’ appeared. He was born at
Salem, Mass., on July 4th, 1804, son of a sea-captain. He
led there a shy and rather sombre life; of few artistic
encouragements, yet not wholly uncongenial, his moody,
intensely meditative temperament being considered. Its
colours and shadows are marvelously reflected in his
‘Twice-Told Tales’ and other short stories, the product of
his first literary period. Even his college days at Bowdoin
did not quite break through his acquired and inherited
reserve; but beneath it all, his faculty of divining men and
women was exercised with almost uncanny prescience and
subtlety. ‘The Scarlet Letter,’ which explains as much of
this unique imaginative art, as is to be gathered from
reading his highest single achievement, yet needs to be
ranged with his other writings, early and late, to have its
last effect. In the year that saw it published, he began ‘The
House of the Seven Gables,’ a later romance or prose-
tragedy of the Puritan-American community as he had
himself known it - defrauded of art and the joy of life,
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THE CUSTOM-HOUSE
INTRODUCTORY TO ‘THE
SCARLET LETTER"
It is a little remarkable, that—though disinclined to talk
overmuch of myself and my affairs at the fireside, and to
my personal friends—an autobiographical impulse should
twice in my life have taken possession of me, in addressing
the public. The first time was three or four years since,
when I favoured the reader—inexcusably, and for no
earthly reason that either the indulgent reader or the
intrusive author could imagine—with a description of my
way of life in the deep quietude of an Old Manse. And
now—because, beyond my deserts, I was happy enough to
find a listener or two on the former occasion—I again
seize the public by the button, and talk of my three years’
experience in a Custom-House. The example of the
famous ‘P. P. , Clerk of this Parish,’ was never more
faithfully followed. The truth seems to be, however, that
when he casts his leaves forth upon the wind, the author
addresses, not the many who will fling aside his volume,
or never take it up, but the few who will understand him
better than most of his schoolmates or lifemates. Some
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speak, but which only he, with such a task of danger and
glory before him, has ever spoken—would be the best and
fittest of all mottoes for the General’s shield of arms. It
contributes greatly towards a man’s moral and intellectual
health to be brought into habits of companionship with
individuals unlike himself, who care little for his pursuits,
and whose sphere and abilities he must go out of himself
to appreciate. The accidents of my life have often afforded
me this advantage, but never with more fulness and variety
than during my continuance in office. There was one
man, especially, the observation of whose character gave
me a new idea of talent. His gifts were emphatically those
of a man of business; prompt, acute, clear-minded; with an
eye that saw through all perplexities, and a faculty of
arrangement that made them vanish as by the waving of an
enchanter’s wand. Bred up from boyhood in the Custom-
House, it was his proper field of activity; and the many
intricacies of business, so harassing to the interloper,
presented themselves before him with the regularity of a
perfectly comprehended system. In my contemplation, he
stood as the ideal of his class. He was, indeed, the
Custom-House in himself; or, at all events, the mainspring
that kept its variously revolving wheels in motion; for, in
an institution like this, where its officers are appointed to
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But the past was not dead. Once in a great while, the
thoughts that had seemed so vital and so active, yet had
been put to rest so quietly, revived again. One of the most
remarkable occasions, when the habit of bygone days
awoke in me, was that which brings it within the law of
literary propriety to offer the public the sketch which I am
now writing.
In the second storey of the Custom-House there is a
large room, in which the brick-work and naked rafters
have never been covered with panelling and plaster. The
edifice—originally projected on a scale adapted to the old
commercial enterprise of the port, and with an idea of
subsequent prosperity destined never to be realized—
contains far more space than its occupants know what to
do with. This airy hall, therefore, over the Collector’s
apartments, remains unfinished to this day, and, in spite of
the aged cobwebs that festoon its dusky beams, appears still
to await the labour of the carpenter and mason. At one
end of the room, in a recess, were a number of barrels
piled one upon another, containing bundles of official
documents. Large quantities of similar rubbish lay
lumbering the floor. It was sorrowful to think how many
days, and weeks, and months, and years of toil had been
wasted on these musty papers, which were now only an
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hour, and with this scene before him, if a man, sitting all
alone, cannot dream strange things, and make them look
like truth, he need never try to write romances.
But, for myself, during the whole of my Custom-
House experience, moonlight and sunshine, and the glow
of firelight, were just alike in my regard; and neither of
them was of one whit more avail than the twinkle of a
tallow-candle. An entire class of susceptibilities, and a gift
connected with them—of no great richness or value, but
the best I had—was gone from me.
It is my belief, however, that had I attempted a
different order of composition, my faculties would not
have been found so pointless and inefficacious. I might, for
instance, have contented myself with writing out the
narratives of a veteran shipmaster, one of the Inspectors,
whom I should be most ungrateful not to mention, since
scarcely a day passed that he did not stir me to laughter
and admiration by his marvelous gifts as a story-teller.
Could I have preserved the picturesque force of his style,
and the humourous colouring which nature taught him
how to throw over his descriptions, the result, I honestly
believe, would have been something new in literature. Or
I might readily have found a more serious task. It was a
folly, with the materiality of this daily life pressing so
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might be, too, that a witch, like old Mistress Hibbins, the
bitter-tempered widow of the magistrate, was to die upon
the gallows. In either case, there was very much the same
solemnity of demeanour on the part of the spectators, as
befitted a people among whom religion and law were
almost identical, and in whose character both were so
thoroughly interfused, that the mildest and severest acts of
public discipline were alike made venerable and awful.
Meagre, indeed, and cold, was the sympathy that a
transgressor might look for, from such bystanders, at the
scaffold. On the other hand, a penalty which, in our days,
would infer a degree of mocking infamy and ridicule,
might then be invested with almost as stern a dignity as the
punishment of death itself.
It was a circumstance to be noted on the summer
morning when our story begins its course, that the
women, of whom there were several in the crowd,
appeared to take a peculiar interest in whatever penal
infliction might be expected to ensue. The age had not so
much refinement, that any sense of impropriety restrained
the wearers of petticoat and farthingale from stepping forth
into the public ways, and wedging their not unsubstantial
persons, if occasion were, into the throng nearest to the
scaffold at an execution. Morally, as well as materially,
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effect, that the world was only the darker for this woman’s
beauty, and the more lost for the infant that she had
borne.
The scene was not without a mixture of awe, such as
must always invest the spectacle of guilt and shame in a
fellow-creature, before society shall have grown corrupt
enough to smile, instead of shuddering at it. The witnesses
of Hester Prynne’s disgrace had not yet passed beyond
their simplicity. They were stern enough to look upon her
death, had that been the sentence, without a murmur at its
severity, but had none of the heartlessness of another social
state, which would find only a theme for jest in an
exhibition like the present. Even had there been a
disposition to turn the matter into ridicule, it must have
been repressed and overpowered by the solemn presence
of men no less dignified than the governor, and several of
his counsellors, a judge, a general, and the ministers of the
town, all of whom sat or stood in a balcony of the
meeting-house, looking down upon the platform. When
such personages could constitute a part of the spectacle,
without risking the majesty, or reverence of rank and
office, it was safely to be inferred that the infliction of a
legal sentence would have an earnest and effectual
meaning. Accordingly, the crowd was sombre and grave.
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inquest with other senses than they possess. I shall seek this
man, as I have sought truth in books: as I have sought gold
in alchemy. There is a sympathy that will make me
conscious of him. I shall see him tremble. I shall feel
myself shudder, suddenly and unawares. Sooner or later,
he must needs be mine.’
The eyes of the wrinkled scholar glowed so intensely
upon her, that Hester Prynne clasped her hand over her
heart, dreading lest he should read the secret there at once.
‘Thou wilt not reveal his name? Not the less he is
mine,’ resumed he, with a look of confidence, as if destiny
were at one with him. ‘He bears no letter of infamy
wrought into his garment, as thou dost, but I shall read it
on his heart . Yet fear not for him! Think not that I shall
interfere with Heaven’s own method of retribution, or, to
my own loss, betray him to the gripe of human law.
Neither do thou imagine that I shall contrive aught against
his life; no, nor against his fame, if as I judge, he be a man
of fair repute. Let him live! Let him hide himself in
outward honour, if he may! Not the less he shall be mine!’
‘Thy acts are like mercy,’ said Hester, bewildered and
appalled; ‘but thy words interpret thee as a terror!’
‘One thing, thou that wast my wife, I would enjoin
upon thee,’ continued the scholar. ‘Thou hast kept the
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VI. PEARL
We have as yet hardly spoken of the infant that little
creature, whose innocent life had sprung, by the
inscrutable decree of Providence, a lovely and immortal
flower, out of the rank luxuriance of a guilty passion.
How strange it seemed to the sad woman, as she watched
the growth, and the beauty that became every day more
brilliant, and the intelligence that threw its quivering
sunshine over the tiny features of this child! Her Pearl—
for so had Hester called her; not as a name expressive of
her aspect, which had nothing of the calm, white,
unimpassioned lustre that would be indicated by the
comparison. But she named the infant ‘Pearl,’ as being of
great price—purchased with all she had—her mother’s
only treasure! How strange, indeed! Man had marked this
woman’s sin by a scarlet letter, which had such potent and
disastrous efficacy that no human sympathy could reach
her, save it were sinful like herself. God, as a direct
consequence of the sin which man thus punished, had
given her a lovely child, whose place was on that same
dishonoured bosom, to connect her parent for ever with
the race and descent of mortals, and to be finally a blessed
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she would be convulsed with rage of grief and sob out her
love for her mother in broken words, and seem intent on
proving that she had a heart by breaking it. Yet Hester was
hardly safe in confiding herself to that gusty tenderness: it
passed as suddenly as it came. Brooding over all these
matters, the mother felt like one who has evoked a spirit,
but, by some irregularity in the process of conjuration, has
failed to win the master-word that should control this new
and incomprehensible intelligence. Her only real comfort
was when the child lay in the placidity of sleep. Then she
was sure of her, and tasted hours of quiet, sad, delicious
happiness; until—perhaps with that perverse expression
glimmering from beneath her opening lids—little Pearl
awoke!
How soon—with what strange rapidity, indeed did
Pearl arrive at an age that was capable of social intercourse
beyond the mother’s ever-ready smile and nonsense-
words! And then what a happiness would it have been
could Hester Prynne have heard her clear, bird-like voice
mingling with the uproar of other childish voices, and
have distinguished and unravelled her own darling’s tones,
amid all the entangled outcry of a group of sportive
children. But this could never be. Pearl was a born outcast
of the infantile world. An imp of evil, emblem and
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very brightest little jet of flame that ever danced upon the
earth.
But it was a remarkable attribute of this garb, and
indeed, of the child’s whole appearance, that it irresistibly
and inevitably reminded the beholder of the token which
Hester Prynne was doomed to wear upon her bosom. It
was the scarlet letter in another form: the scarlet letter
endowed with life! The mother herself—as if the red
ignominy were so deeply scorched into her brain that all
her conceptions assumed its form—had carefully wrought
out the similitude, lavishing many hours of morbid
ingenuity to create an analogy between the object of her
affection and the emblem of her guilt and torture. But, in
truth, Pearl was the one as well as the other; and only in
consequence of that identity had Hester contrived so
perfectly to represent the scarlet letter in her appearance.
As the two wayfarers came within the precincts of the
town, the children of the Puritans looked up from their
player what passed for play with those sombre little
urchins—and spoke gravely one to another
‘Behold, verily, there is the woman of the scarlet letter:
and of a truth, moreover, there is the likeness of the scarlet
letter running along by her side! Come, therefore, and let
us fling mud at them!’
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For Hester Prynne’s sake, then, and no less for the poor
child’s sake, let us leave them as Providence hath seen fit
to place them!’
‘You speak, my friend, with a strange earnestness,’ said
old Roger Chillingworth, smiling at him.
‘And there is a weighty import in what my young
brother hath spoken,’ added the Rev. Mr. Wilson.
‘What say you, worshipful Master Bellingham? Hath he
not pleaded well for the poor woman?’
‘Indeed hath he,’ answered the magistrate; ‘and hath
adduced such arguments, that we will even leave the
matter as it now stands; so long, at least, as there shall be
no further scandal in the woman. Care must be had
nevertheless, to put the child to due and stated
examination in the catechism, at thy hands or Master
Dimmesdale’s. Moreover, at a proper season, the tithing-
men must take heed that she go both to school and to
meeting.’
The young minister, on ceasing to speak had
withdrawn a few steps from the group, and stood with his
face partially concealed in the heavy folds of the window-
curtain; while the shadow of his figure, which the sunlight
cast upon the floor, was tremulous with the vehemence of
his appeal. Pearl, that wild and flighty little elf stole softly
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towards him, and taking his hand in the grasp of both her
own, laid her cheek against it; a caress so tender, and
withal so unobtrusive, that her mother, who was looking
on, asked herself—‘Is that my Pearl?’ Yet she knew that
there was love in the child’s heart, although it mostly
revealed itself in passion, and hardly twice in her lifetime
had been softened by such gentleness as now. The
minister—for, save the long-sought regards of woman,
nothing is sweeter than these marks of childish preference,
accorded spontaneously by a spiritual instinct, and
therefore seeming to imply in us something truly worthy
to be loved—the minister looked round, laid his hand on
the child’s head, hesitated an instant, and then kissed her
brow. Little Pearl’s unwonted mood of sentiment lasted
no longer; she laughed, and went capering down the hall
so airily, that old Mr. Wilson raised a question whether
even her tiptoes touched the floor.
‘The little baggage hath witchcraft in her, I profess,’
said he to Mr. Dimmesdale. ‘She needs no old woman’s
broomstick to fly withal!’
‘A strange child!’ remarked old Roger Chillingworth.
‘It is easy to see the mother’s part in her. Would it be
beyond a philosopher’s research, think ye, gentlemen, to
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and keep watch over my little Pearl. Had they taken her
from me, I would willingly have gone with thee into the
forest, and signed my name in the Black Man’s book too,
and that with mine own blood!’
‘We shall have thee there anon!’ said the witch-lady,
frowning, as she drew back her head.
But here—if we suppose this interview betwixt
Mistress Hibbins and Hester Prynne to be authentic, and
not a parable—was already an illustration of the young
minister’s argument against sundering the relation of a
fallen mother to the offspring of her frailty. Even thus
early had the child saved her from Satan’s snare.
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life and physical well being, hath all the operations of this
disorder been fairly laid open and recounted to me?’
‘How can you question it?’ asked the minister. ‘Surely
it were child’s play to call in a physician and then hide the
sore!’
‘You would tell me, then, that I know all?’ said Roger
Chillingworth, deliberately, and fixing an eye, bright with
intense and concentrated intelligence, on the minister’s
face. ‘Be it so! But again! He to whom only the outward
and physical evil is laid open, knoweth, oftentimes, but
half the evil which he is called upon to cure. A bodily
disease, which we look upon as whole and entire within
itself, may, after all, be but a symptom of some ailment in
the spiritual part. Your pardon once again, good sir, if my
speech give the shadow of offence. You, sir, of all men
whom I have known, are he whose body is the closest
conjoined, and imbued, and identified, so to speak, with
the spirit whereof it is the instrument.’
‘Then I need ask no further,’ said the clergyman,
somewhat hastily rising from his chair. ‘You deal not, I
take it, in medicine for the soul!’
‘Thus, a sickness,’ continued Roger Chillingworth,
going on, in an unaltered tone, without heeding the
interruption, but standing up and confronting the
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would creep into his frame, and stiffen his joints with
rheumatism, and clog his throat with catarrh and cough;
thereby defrauding the expectant audience of to-morrow’s
prayer and sermon. No eye could see him, save that ever-
wakeful one which had seen him in his closet, wielding
the bloody scourge. Why, then, had he come hither? Was
it but the mockery of penitence? A mockery, indeed, but
in which his soul trifled with itself! A mockery at which
angels blushed and wept, while fiends rejoiced with
jeering laughter! He had been driven hither by the impulse
of that Remorse which dogged him everywhere, and
whose own sister and closely linked companion was that
Cowardice which invariably drew him back, with her
tremulous gripe, just when the other impulse had hurried
him to the verge of a disclosure. Poor, miserable man!
what right had infirmity like his to burden itself with
crime? Crime is for the iron-nerved, who have their
choice either to endure it, or, if it press too hard, to exert
their fierce and savage strength for a good purpose, and
fling it off at once! This feeble and most sensitive of spirits
could do neither, yet continually did one thing or another,
which intertwined, in the same inextricable knot, the
agony of heaven-defying guilt and vain repentance.
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his feet, and never once turning his head towards the
guilty platform. When the light of the glimmering lantern
had faded quite away, the minister discovered, by the
faintness which came over him, that the last few moments
had been a crisis of terrible anxiety, although his mind had
made an involuntary effort to relieve itself by a kind of
lurid playfulness.
Shortly afterwards, the like grisly sense of the humorous
again stole in among the solemn phantoms of his thought.
He felt his limbs growing stiff with the unaccustomed
chilliness of the night, and doubted whether he should be
able to descend the steps of the scaffold. Morning would
break and find him there The neighbourhood would
begin to rouse itself. The earliest riser, coming forth in the
dim twilight, would perceive a vaguely-defined figure
aloft on the place of shame; and half-crazed betwixt alarm
and curiosity, would go knocking from door to door,
summoning all the people to behold the ghost—as he
needs must think it—of some defunct transgressor. A
dusky tumult would flap its wings from one house to
another. Then—the morning light still waxing stronger—
old patriarchs would rise up in great haste, each in his
flannel gown, and matronly dames, without pausing to put
off their night-gear. The whole tribe of decorous
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and secret pain, had extended his egotism over the whole
expanse of nature, until the firmament itself should appear
no more than a fitting page for his soul’s history and fate.
We impute it, therefore, solely to the disease in his
own eye and heart that the minister, looking upward to
the zenith, beheld there the appearance of an immense
letter—the letter A—marked out in lines of dull red light.
Not but the meteor may have shown itself at that point,
burning duskily through a veil of cloud, but with no such
shape as his guilty imagination gave it, or, at least, with so
little definiteness, that another’s guilt might have seen
another symbol in it.
There was a singular circumstance that characterised
Mr. Dimmesdale’s psychological state at this moment. All
the time that he gazed upward to the zenith, he was,
nevertheless, perfectly aware that little Pearl was hinting
her finger towards old Roger Chillingworth, who stood at
no great distance from the scaffold. The minister appeared
to see him, with the same glance that discerned the
miraculous letter. To his feature as to all other objects, the
meteoric light imparted a new expression; or it might well
be that the physician was not careful then, as at all other
times, to hide the malevolence with which he looked
upon his victim. Certainly, if the meteor kindled up the
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have been far otherwise. Then she might have come down
to us in history, hand in hand with Ann Hutchinson, as
the foundress of a religious sect. She might, in one of her
phases, have been a prophetess. She might, and not
improbably would, have suffered death from the stern
tribunals of the period, for attempting to undermine the
foundations of the Puritan establishment. But, in the
education of her child, the mother’s enthusiasm thought
had something to wreak itself upon. Providence, in the
person of this little girl, had assigned to Hester’s charge,
the germ and blossom of womanhood, to be cherished and
developed amid a host of difficulties. Everything was
against her. The world was hostile. The child’s own nature
had something wrong in it which continually betokened
that she had been born amiss—the effluence of her
mother’s lawless passion—and often impelled Hester to
ask, in bitterness of heart, whether it were for ill or good
that the poor little creature had been born at all.
Indeed, the same dark question often rose into her
mind with reference to the whole race of womanhood.
Was existence worth accepting even to the happiest
among them? As concerned her own individual existence,
she had long ago decided in the negative, and dismissed
the point as settled. A tendency to speculation, though it
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may keep women quiet, as it does man, yet makes her sad.
She discerns, it may be, such a hopeless task before her. As
a first step, the whole system of society is to be torn down
and built up anew. Then the very nature of the opposite
sex, or its long hereditary habit, which has become like
nature, is to be essentially modified before woman can be
allowed to assume what seems a fair and suitable position.
Finally, all other difficulties being obviated, woman cannot
take advantage of these preliminary reforms until she
herself shall have undergone a still mightier change, in
which, perhaps, the ethereal essence, wherein she has her
truest life, will be found to have evaporated. A woman
never overcomes these problems by any exercise of
thought. They are not to be solved, or only in one way. If
her heart chance to come uppermost, they vanish. Thus
Hester Prynne, whose heart had lost its regular and healthy
throb, wandered without a clue in the dark labyrinth of
mind; now turned aside by an insurmountable precipice;
now starting back from a deep chasm. There was wild and
ghastly scenery all around her, and a home and comfort
nowhere. At times a fearful doubt strove to possess her
soul, whether it were not better to send Pearl at once to
Heaven, and go herself to such futurity as Eternal Justice
should provide.
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itself as they came nigh, and left the spots where it had
danced the drearier, because they had hoped to find them
bright.
‘Mother,’ said little Pearl, ‘the sunshine does not love
you. It runs away and hides itself, because it is afraid of
something on your bosom. Now, see! There it is, playing
a good way off. Stand you here, and let me run and catch
it. I am but a child. It will not flee from me—for I wear
nothing on my bosom yet!’
‘Nor ever will, my child, I hope,’ said Hester.
‘And why not, mother?’ asked Pearl, stopping short,
just at the beginning of her race. ‘Will not it come of its
own accord when I am a woman grown?’
‘Run away, child,’ answered her mother, ‘and catch the
sunshine. It will soon be gone ‘
Pearl set forth at a great pace, and as Hester smiled to
perceive, did actually catch the sunshine, and stood
laughing in the midst of it, all brightened by its splendour,
and scintillating with the vivacity excited by rapid motion.
The light lingered about the lonely child, as if glad of such
a playmate, until her mother had drawn almost nigh
enough to step into the magic circle too.
‘It will go now,’ said Pearl, shaking her head.
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will sit down a little way within the wood, and rest
ourselves.’
‘I am not aweary, mother,’ replied the little girl. ‘But
you may sit down, if you will tell me a story meanwhile.’
‘A story, child!’ said Hester. ‘And about what?’
‘Oh, a story about the Black Man,’ answered Pearl,
taking hold of her mother’s gown, and looking up, half
earnestly, half mischievously, into her face.
‘How he haunts this forest, and carries a book with him
a big, heavy book, with iron clasps; and how this ugly
Black Man offers his book and an iron pen to everybody
that meets him here among the trees; and they are to write
their names with their own blood; and then he sets his
mark on their bosoms. Didst thou ever meet the Black
Man, mother?’
‘And who told you this story, Pearl,’ asked her mother,
recognising a common superstition of the period.
‘It was the old dame in the chimney corner, at the
house where you watched last night,’ said the child. ‘But
she fancied me asleep while she was talking of it. She said
that a thousand and a thousand people had met him here,
and had written in his book, and have his mark on them.
And that ugly tempered lady, old Mistress Hibbins, was
one. And, mother, the old dame said that this scarlet letter
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was the Black Man’s mark on thee, and that it glows like a
red flame when thou meetest him at midnight, here in the
dark wood. Is it true, mother? And dost thou go to meet
him in the nighttime?’
‘Didst thou ever awake and find thy mother gone?’
asked Hester. ‘Not that I remember,’ said the child. ‘If
thou fearest to leave me in our cottage, thou mightest take
me along with thee. I would very gladly go! But, mother,
tell me now! Is there such a Black Man? And didst thou
ever meet him? And is this his mark?’
‘Wilt thou let me be at peace, if I once tell thee?’ asked
her mother.
‘Yes, if thou tellest me all,’ answered Pearl.
‘Once in my life I met the Black Man!’ said her
mother. This scarlet letter is his mark!’
Thus conversing, they entered sufficiently deep into the
wood to secure themselves from the observation of any
casual passenger along the forest track. Here they sat down
on a luxuriant heap of moss; which at some epoch of the
preceding century, had been a gigantic pine, with its roots
and trunk in the darksome shade, and its head aloft in the
upper atmosphere It was a little dell where they had seated
themselves, with a leaf-strewn bank rising gently on either
side, and a brook flowing through the midst, over a bed of
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‘Even so.’ she answered. ‘In such life as has been mine
these seven years past! And thou, Arthur Dimmesdale, dost
thou yet live?’
It was no wonder that they thus questioned one
another’s actual and bodily existence, and even doubted of
their own. So strangely did they meet in the dim wood
that it was like the first encounter in the world beyond the
grave of two spirits who had been intimately connected in
their former life, but now stood coldly shuddering in
mutual dread, as not yet familiar with their state, nor
wonted to the companionship of disembodied beings.
Each a ghost, and awe-stricken at the other ghost. They
were awe-stricken likewise at themselves, because the
crisis flung back to them their consciousness, and revealed
to each heart its history and experience, as life never does,
except at such breathless epochs. The soul beheld its
features in the mirror of the passing moment. It was with
fear, and tremulously, and, as it were, by a slow, reluctant
necessity, that Arthur Dimmesdale put forth his hand, chillChillingworth
reference?
as death, and touched the chill hand of Hester Prynne.
The grasp, cold as it was, took away what was dreariest in
the interview. They now felt themselves, at least,
inhabitants of the same sphere.
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fortunes had been to set her free. The scarlet letter was her
passport into regions where other women dared not tread.
Shame, Despair, Solitude! These had been her teachers—
stern and wild ones—and they had made her strong, but
taught her much amiss.
The minister, on the other hand, had never gone
through an experience calculated to lead him beyond the
scope of generally received laws; although, in a single
instance, he had so fearfully transgressed one of the most
sacred of them. But this had been a sin of passion, not of
principle, nor even purpose. Since that wretched epoch,
he had watched with morbid zeal and minuteness, not his
acts—for those it was easy to arrange—but each breath of
emotion, and his every thought. At the head of the social
system, as the clergymen of that day stood, he was only
the more trammelled by its regulations, its principles, and
even its prejudices. As a priest, the framework of his order
inevitably hemmed him in. As a man who had once
sinned, but who kept his conscience all alive and painfully
sensitive by the fretting of an unhealed wound, he might
have been supposed safer within the line of virtue than if
he had never sinned at all.
Thus we seem to see that, as regarded Hester Prynne,
the whole seven years of outlaw and ignominy had been
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‘Ah, that was sad!’ answered the mother. ‘But she will
love thee dearly, and thou her. She is not far off. I will call
her. Pearl! Pearl!’
‘I see the child,’ observed the minister. ‘Yonder she is,
standing in a streak of sunshine, a good way off, on the
other side of the brook. So thou thinkest the child will
love me?’
Hester smiled, and again called to Pearl, who was
visible at some distance, as the minister had described her,
like a bright-apparelled vision in a sunbeam, which fell
down upon her through an arch of boughs. The ray
quivered to and fro, making her figure dim or distinct—
now like a real child, now like a child’s spirit—as the
splendour went and came again. She heard her mother’s
voice, and approached slowly through the forest.
Pearl had not found the hour pass wearisomely while
her mother sat talking with the clergyman. The great black
forest—stern as it showed itself to those who brought the
guilt and troubles of the world into its bosom—became
the playmate of the lonely infant, as well as it knew how.
Sombre as it was, it put on the kindest of its moods to
welcome her. It offered her the partridge-berries, the
growth of the preceding autumn, but ripening only in the
spring, and now red as drops of blood upon the withered
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that seemed like the shine of the celestial city on her face,
so wrinkled and ashy pale.
Again, a third instance. After parting from the old
church member, he met the youngest sister of them all. It
was a maiden newly-won—and won by the Reverend
Mr. Dimmesdale’s own sermon, on the Sabbath after his
vigil—to barter the transitory pleasures of the world for
the heavenly hope that was to assume brighter substance as
life grew dark around her, and which would gild the utter
gloom with final glory. She was fair and pure as a lily that
had bloomed in Paradise. The minister knew well that he
was himself enshrined within the stainless sanctity of her
heart, which hung its snowy curtains about his image,
imparting to religion the warmth of love, and to love a
religious purity. Satan, that afternoon, had surely led the
poor young girl away from her mother’s side, and thrown
her into the pathway of this sorely tempted, or—shall we
not rather say?—this lost and desperate man. As she drew
nigh, the arch-fiend whispered him to condense into small
compass, and drop into her tender bosom a germ of evil
that would be sure to blossom darkly soon, and bear black
fruit betimes. Such was his sense of power over this virgin
soul, trusting him as she did, that the minister felt potent
to blight all the field of innocence with but one wicked
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look, and develop all its opposite with but a word. So—
with a mightier struggle than he had yet sustained—he
held his Geneva cloak before his face, and hurried onward,
making no sign of recognition, and leaving the young
sister to digest his rudeness as she might. She ransacked her
conscience—which was full of harmless little matters, like
her pocket or her work-bag—and took herself to task,
poor thing! for a thousand imaginary faults, and went
about her household duties with swollen eyelids the next
morning.
Before the minister had time to celebrate his victory
over this last temptation, he was conscious of another
impulse, more ludicrous, and almost as horrible. It was—
we blush to tell it—it was to stop short in the road, and
teach some very wicked words to a knot of little Puritan
children who were playing there, and had but just begun
to talk. Denying himself this freak, as unworthy of his
cloth, he met a drunken seaman, one of the ship’s crew
from the Spanish Main. And here, since he had so
valiantly forborne all other wickedness, poor Mr.
Dimmesdale longed at least to shake hands with the tarry
black-guard, and recreate himself with a few improper
jests, such as dissolute sailors so abound with, and a volley
of good, round, solid, satisfactory, and heaven-defying
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XXIV. CONCLUSION
After many days, when time sufficed for the people to
arrange their thoughts in reference to the foregoing scene,
there was more than one account of what had been
witnessed on the scaffold.
Most of the spectators testified to having seen, on the
breast of the unhappy minister, a SCARLET LETTER—
the very semblance of that worn by Hester Prynne—
imprinted in the flesh. As regarded its origin there were
various explanations, all of which must necessarily have
been conjectural. Some affirmed that the Reverend Mr.
Dimmesdale, on the very day when Hester Prynne first
wore her ignominious badge, had begun a course of
penance—which he afterwards, in so many futile methods,
followed out—by inflicting a hideous torture on himself.
Others contended that the stigma had not been produced
until a long time subsequent, when old Roger
Chillingworth, being a potent necromancer, had caused it
to appear, through the agency of magic and poisonous
drugs. Others, again and those best able to appreciate the
minister’s peculiar sensibility, and the wonderful operation
of his spirit upon the body—whispered their belief, that
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Show freely to the world, if not your worst, yet some trait
whereby the worst may be inferred!’
Nothing was more remarkable than the change which
took place, almost immediately after Mr. Dimmesdale’s
death, in the appearance and demeanour of the old man
known as Roger Chillingworth. All his strength and
energy—all his vital and intellectual force—seemed at
once to desert him, insomuch that he positively withered
up, shrivelled away and almost vanished from mortal sight,
like an uprooted weed that lies wilting in the sun. This
unhappy man had made the very principle of his life to
consist in the pursuit and systematic exercise revenge; and
when, by its completest triumph consummation that evil
principle was left with no further material to support it—
when, in short, there was no more Devil’s work on earth
for him to do, it only remained for the unhumanised
mortal to betake himself whither his master would find
him tasks enough, and pay him his wages duly. But, to all
these shadowy beings, so long our near acquaintances—as
well Roger Chillingworth as his companions we would
fain be merciful. It is a curious subject of observation and
inquiry, whether hatred and love be not the same thing at
bottom. Each, in its utmost development, supposes a high
degree of intimacy and heart-knowledge; each renders one
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