Arthur Dimmesdale - Dimmesdale is a young man who was well known in England, He emigrated to America. In a second of impotence Hester and him have an affair. He is embarrassed of what he has done and denies being Pearl's father. He deals with his sin and guilt by tormenting himself physically and psychologically, expanding a heart condition as a result.
Afraid - Dimmesdale is the father of Pearl, but is afraid to admit it and be judged since he is a man of good and is well educated.
Governor Bellingham - wealthy, elderly gentleman who spends much of his …show more content…
The novel takes place in present day Boston in a community named Massachusetts Bay Colony. During the mid seventeenth century New England and specifically Boston. The state religion was Church of England. In a community specifically designed to be religiously pure, and secularly strict.
6. The narration originates in the seventeenth-century Boston,in a Puritan settlement.Young Hester Prynne, is guided from the town prison with her baby daughter, Pearl, in her arms and a scarlet letter on her chest. A man in the crowd tells an old observer that Hester is being punished for adultery. Hester’s husband, a man of good much older than she is, sent her to America, but he never arrived to Boston on time which makes everyone assume he has been lost in the sea .While waiting for her husband, Hester has an affair with Arthur, and ends up pregnant . She will not expose the baby’s dad identity, however, as a result she is in public shaming, punishment for her sin and her secrecy. On this day Hester is led to the town scaffold and addressed by the town fathers, but she again refuses to tell who Pearl’s dad