![]() ![]() He steps in front of Hester and Pearl and declares that on his breast he bears the sign of his sin. Then he turns to the crowd and cries out his guilt. The minister tells Hester that he is dying and must acknowledge his shame. Chillingworth's face darkens as he realizes that nowhere else but on the scaffold can Dimmesdale escape him. The crowd watches in astonishment as the minister, leaning on Hester and holding Pearl's hand, ascends the scaffold steps. ![]() Suddenly, Chillingworth appears and attempts to stop Dimmesdale, but the minister scorns the old physician and cries out to Hester to help him get up to the scaffold. There Dimmesdale pauses.Īs the minister turns to the scaffold, he calls Hester and Pearl to his side. Several people attempt to help him, but the minister repels them until he comes to the scaffold where Hester stands holding Pearl by the hand. His face has taken on a deathly pallor, and he can scarcely walk. "Never, on New England soil, has stood the man so honored by his mortal brethren, as the preacher!" But the shout dies to a murmur as the people see Dimmesdale totter feebly and nervously in the procession. As the procession of dignitaries marches to a banquet at the town hall, the feelings of the crowd are expressed in a spontaneous shout of tribute to Dimmesdale. This moment is the most brilliant and triumphant in Dimmesdale's public life. At the end of Dimmesdale's Election Day sermon, the crowd emerges from the church, inspired by powerful words they have just heard from a man whom they feel is soon to die. ![]()
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