Hello. I thought you might be my Pearl. I am surprised that you see me, no one else does. No, do not be afraid. I beg you, I am no one to harm you. Please set, enjoy the view. My name? Hester. A ghost? I suppose I am. I have been sleeping for many years here above the township of Boston. Strange how time is nothing when you are a ghost sleeping. It seems to stand still, blend and just meld into one long day. You would like to know my story? If you have the time I will tell of it.
Long ago, though it seems only yesterday, as I said time seems to stand still. Yet things are so different when I look down at the harbor and see lights that never go out. I hear sounds I have not heard before so I know time has not stood still . When I was living I fell in love with a man that I did not and shall not name for fear of ruining his good name among the townspeople, all good Puritans they. I tried to resist the temptation but love has a mind of it's own . We fell in love. Out of this love I bore a child. A daughter. I named her Pearl as a rare jewel she was. Because I would not name the father and will not I was forced to stand upon the towns scaffold holding my Pearl against my bosom. I was ridiculed, called many horrible names that I shall not say as we are ladies . The final punishment for my sins against God and man is a letter. Such a beautiful color the letter was. It is still here , do you see it? Time has faded the letter I am sure yet it is still there. I can feel it there. It stays with me and is a part of me.
The letter? A- the letter A for adulteress. Emblazoned upon my bosom for all to see. Such a color this A. Scarlett as red as the hottest fires of hell. Blazing. It is embroidered with golden thread.
Were it not for the shame and stigma it carries it would be lovely to look upon. But there was and is the shame. I did not say that when I fell in love with the man I shall not name I was a married woman. My husband was to come, I did not wait.
The people forced my Pearl and I to live far from the township. We lived in a rickety cottage in the woods beyond Boston. We stayed to ourselves yet there were times when we had to go into the town. Those times were so hard to bear. As for me I could withstand the pointed fingers and names but my Pearl , an innocent was subjected to the pointing and name calling .. she paid for my sins and indiscretions . My sweet Pearl who once asked me when she would get the letter on her bodice. The poor child thought it was a sign of womanhood. I wonder where she could be? She always came.. The year is what? Two-thousand-ten? How can this be? If I have been sleeping for over three-hundred years, my Pearl sleeps too. My poor Pearl. I wonder where she sleeps? I wonder if I have grandchildren? No, please stay. I will tell you the rest of my story.
Pearl grew into a fine woman, a lady. Though she had no friends or beaus she seemed happy to share her days with only me. When Pearl was eighteen I became ill. She nursed me like a mother. She became my mother. Without medicines and doctors I fell to this illness and have been sleeping since. Pearl begged the townsmen and Pastor to let me be buried beside my parents in the town cemetery. They refused telling her I would not be allowed to taint the ground of those many good men and women .
This is where they told her to bring me .. here atop this hill overlooking the Boston Harbor. She placed me inside the tower kissed me and closed the door. I could hear her. She said, 'Dear mother the sun never shone upon you. Here it shines bright and will shine down upon you each day'. She planted flowers. This did not set well with the townspeople.They said I deserved no beauty. They ordered them removed and placed a fence around my tower. Pearl stopped coming. I didn't bother to wake.
I see you are looking at the two flowers outside the fence. They are beautiful. These flowers have survived all this time that has passed. The people did not see them as they were only seedlings when they pulled the others from the earth. She planted one for me and one for her. No red, she said only gold ... Gold like the sunshine shining down upon us at this moment. Gold like the love of a mother and a daughter. Those are the last words I heard her speak.
You are leaving? Why are you crying? Please, don't shed any tears. I sleep well. The letter and the sins I committed against man and God they are forgiven. No tears for me.
I am Hester Prynne and I sleep peacefully. I do wish I knew where my Pearl sleeps.
A mother worries. Please come back another time.
Goodbye.