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Wikisource:WikiProject Film/Drafts/Archives/The Scarlet Letter (1934 film)

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User: PseudoSkull

File: The Scarlet Letter (1934).webm

Author: Robert G. Vignola

Publisher: Majestic Pictures

Year: 1934

PD: PD-US-defective-notice|1953

Note: ''The Scarlet Letter'' is a 1934 American drama film directed by Robert G. Vignola and based on [[The Scarlet Letter|the 1850 novel of the same name]] by [[Author:Nathaniel Hawthorne|Nathaniel Hawthorne]].

Cat: Drama film, Films based on books, Films with historical settings

----

00:01-00:51

{{ft/s|
{{blackletter block|
{{c|
{{smaller|Majestic Pictures Corporation}}
<br>
{{xx-smaller|presents}}
<br>
{{xx-larger|The SCARLET<br>LETTER}}
<br>
{{xx-smaller|from}}
<br>
[[Author:Nathaniel Hawthorne|Nathaniel Hawthorne]]'s
<br>
{{smaller|[[The Scarlet Letter|Immortal Classic]]}}
<br>
~
<br>
Produced by Larry Darmour
<br>
{{xx-larger|~}}
<br>
{{smaller|Directed by}}
<br>
{{xxx-larger|[[Author:Robert G. Vignola|Robert G. Vignola]]}}
<br>
{{xx-larger|~}}
{{c|
{{x-smaller|Screen Play by}}
<br>
{{smaller|Leonard Fields}} {{x-smaller|and}} {{smaller|David Silverstein}}
}}}}
{{TOC begin}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Photographed by}}|{{x-smaller|James S. Brown, Jr.}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Assistant Director}}|{{x-smaller|J.A. Duffy}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Settings by}}|{{x-smaller|Frank Dexter}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Film Editor}}|{{x-smaller|Charles Harris}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Costumes by}}|{{x-smaller|Western Costume Corp.}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Sound Recording by}}|{{x-smaller|Thomas J. Lambert}}}}
{{TOC end}}
}}
{{c|
{{xx-smaller block|
RECORDED BY RCA VICTOR SYSTEM<br>
PASSED BY THE NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW<br>
COPYRIGHT MCMXXXIV
}}}}
{{blackletter block|
{{c|{{xx-larger|~}}
<br>
{{x-smaller|The Players}}}}
{{TOC begin}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|Hester Prynne|{{x-larger|Colleen Moore}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Arthur Dimmesdale}}|{{x-smaller|Hardie Albright}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Roger Chillingworth}}|{{x-smaller|Henry B. Walthall}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Pearl}}|{{x-smaller|Cora Sue Collins}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Bartholomew Hockings}}|{{x-smaller|Alan Hale}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Abigail Crakstone}}|{{x-smaller|Virginia Howell}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Sampson Goodfellow}}|{{x-smaller|William T. Kent}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Governor Bellingham}}|{{x-smaller|William Farnum}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Innkeeper}}|{{x-smaller|Betty Blythe}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Master Wilson}}|{{x-smaller|Al O. Henderson}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Beadle}}|{{x-smaller|Jules Cowles}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Digerie Crakstone}}|{{x-smaller|Mickey Rentchler}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Humility Crakstone}}|{{x-smaller|Shirley Jean Rickert}}}}
{{TOC row 2dot-1|{{x-smaller|Gossip}}|{{x-smaller|Flora Finch}}}}
{{TOC end}}
}}
}}

----

00:57

{{ft/s|
{{blackletter block|
{{c|
{{smaller|FOREWORD}}
<br>
{{di|T}}his is more than the story of a woman——it is a portrait of the Puritan period in American life. Though to us, the customs seem grim and the punishments hard, they were a necessity of the times and helped shape the destiny of a nation.
}}
}}
}}

----

01:24

{{ft/i|
{{blackletter block|
{{c|
Ye King's Colony of Maſſachuſetts
<br><br>
<u>''15<sup>th</sup>''</u> day, ye <u>''6<sup>th</sup>''</u> Month ... 26<u>42</u>
<br><br>
{{di|F}}or Malicious Gossip, Mistress Faith Bartle ſhall wear Ye Cleft Stick
}}}}
{{right|{{smaller|<u>{{cursive|R. Bellingham}}</u>}}<br>{{xx-smaller|{{bl|Governor}}}}
}}}}

----

01:44

{{ft/i|
ye<br>{{gap|0.5em}}Gossip
}}

----

01:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Man|Master Bartle is indeed a lucky man. Aye, his wife will be silent at least one day.}}
}}

----

02:02

{{ft/i|
{{c|For Laughing on<br>ye Sabbath}}
}}

----

02:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|A pretty spectacle—my bosom companion seated in the stocks again. But it pains me more than thee.}}
}}

----

02:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Aye, but not in the same place.}}
}}

----

02:50

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Ah, here comes your beloved now.}}
}}

----

02:52

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Oh, Bartholomew! Bartholomew, stand before me, please! Please stand before me.}}
}}

----

03:01

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Good day, Mistress Abigail.}}
}}

----

03:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Good day, Master Bartholomew.}}
}}

----

03:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Yes, I've seen Master Sampson. I'm waiting here for him.}}
}}

----

03:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Digerie Crakstone|Oh, look, Mother, Master Sampson's in the stocks!}}
}}

----

03:13

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Greetings, Mistress Abigail.}}
}}

----

03:16

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Sinner! You had better heed the teaching of the Reverend Dimmesdale, or you will end your days on the scuffle.}}
}}

----

03:26

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Hey! Ishkaba!<ref>{{ua|In this scene, where Roger Chillingworth speaks to a Native American in his native language, it is unknown whether the language used in this film is legitimate or gibberish, what language it would be in, or how accurate the pronunciation and grammar is to any language. Therefore, in this transcription, the language is transcribed as accurately as possible to its received pronunciation.}}</ref>}}
}}

----

03:33

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Dima bayutuwa bayorega?}}
}}

----

03:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Ishkaba|Dila shtate, dala iseshkawa.}}
}}

----

03:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Ah.}}
}}

----

04:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Good day.}}
}}

----

04:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Good day, Mistress. Can you serve me food and lodging?}}
}}

----

04:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Lodging we have none. But can you not return later for food? Even now the bell summons us all to the square.}}
}}

----

04:18

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Is it at feast day?}}
}}

----

04:20

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Have you not heard of the scandal in the Master Dimmesdale's church? From whence came you?}}
}}

----

04:26

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|From the south, where I was shipwrecked, and spent two weary years among the heathens.}}
}}

----

04:33

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Oh! It must gladden your heart to again be in a land where iniquity is searched out and punished.}}
}}

----

04:41

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Truly.}}
}}

----

04:42

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Even today a gentlewoman is being punished by the magistrate for indulgement.}}
}}

----

04:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Does her husband accuse her?}}
}}

----

04:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Oh, no. No, she's a widow. Her husband was a learned doctor. The plague which was raging in London detained him, so he sent her on ahead.}}
}}

----

04:59

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|What happened to him?}}
}}

----

05:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|He must be at the bottom of the sea, for there have been no tidings from him in over two years. Being left to her own misguidance, his wife, Hester Prynne, went astray.}}
}}

----

05:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Hester Prynne? 'Tis a lie! A purer creature never lived.}}
}}

----

05:16

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|You know her?}}
}}

----

05:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Know her? I'm her husba-...her husband's best friend.}}
}}

----

05:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Oh.}}
}}

----

05:23

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Who accuses her?}}
}}

----

05:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Her child.}}
}}

----

05:30

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Hester Prynne, a child?}}
}}

----

05:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|Aye, a little girl.}}
}}

----

05:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|You mean, Hester Prynne has born a child in the past two years?}}
}}

----

05:44

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Innkeeper|I do.}}
}}

----

05:59

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 1|It would be well for the public if we women had the handling of such hussies as Hester Prynne.}}
}}

----

06:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 2|Well said, goodwife. We would teach her a pretty lesson.}}
}}

----

06:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Is one mad to look upon a gentlewoman's shame?}}
}}

----

06:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Man|But, Master Dimmesdale, Moses in the law commands that such as she be stoned.}}
}}

----

06:34

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|'Twas but one greater than Moses said, "He who is without sin may first cast a stone."}}
}}

----

06:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Master Dimmesdale, you should not take the sin of one of your flock so much to heart.}}
}}

----

06:42

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Governor Bellingham, our Lord did pardon such a one. He said, "Go, woman, and sin no more." Cannot we do as much?}}
}}

----

06:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Oh, with what could so be pardoned to precede the penalty?}}
}}

----

07:13

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|A blessing on ye righteous people of the Colony of the Massachusetts!}}
}}

----

07:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|Make way, good people! Make way in the King's name!}}
}}

----

07:51

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Look! The baggage walks with the dignity of a queen. Has she no shame?}}
}}

----

07:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Peace, peace. She suffers enough.}}
}}

----

08:31

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Hester Prynne, you have been found guilty of adultery. We are loathed to invoke the full penalty of the law. {{reconstruct|For the people,}} reveal the name of him that tempted you.}}
}}

----

08:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|No.}}
}}

----

08:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Master Dimmesdale, as her pastor, you know best what arguments to use to prevail upon her to speak his name.}}
}}

----

08:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|'Twould {{reconstruct|endanger}} a woman to force her to lay open her heart secret before so great a multitude.}}
}}

----

09:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Man|The shame lay in the commission of the sin, not in the showing of it. Someone must deal with this sinner. Shall it be you or I?}}
}}

----

09:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Poor Master Dimmesdale. It is a shame that such a scandal should come upon his congregation.}}
}}

----

09:21

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester Prynne, I beg you to speak out the name of your fellow sinner. Be not silent from any mistaken pity for him, for your silence compels him to add hypocrisy to sin, though he has not the courage to grasp it for himself. For the peace of his soul, do not deny him the comfort of an honest confession, even though he were to step down from a high place to share your shame.}}
}}

----

09:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Speak, woman, speak!}}
}}

----

10:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Crowd|Aye! Speak! Speak!}}
}}

----

10:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|No! No, never! I wish I could bear his agony as well as mine.}}
}}

----

10:18

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Hester Prynne, so that all men may know you are guilty of the sin of adultery, and shun you {{reconstruct|in their wisdom}} of evil, it is now ordered that you shall wear upon your bosom for the rest of your natural life the scarlet letter A.}}
}}

----

10:42

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 1|A wise sentence. She will be a living sermon against sin.}}
}}

----

10:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 2|But she can cover the mark with her hand and stroll about as bold as ever.}}
}}

----

10:51

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|True. It would be better if they put the brand of the hot iron on her forehead. That she could not hide.}}
}}

----

10:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Let her cover the mark if she will. The pain of it will always be in her heart.}}
}}

----

11:06

{{ft/i|
{{c|A}}
}}

----

11:28

{{ft/i|
{{c|''HESTER PRYNNE<br>ye {{larger|SEAMSTRESS}}''}}
}}

----

12:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|You should not have come here.}}
}}

----

12:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester, I cannot keep silent. I will not see you go through life with that infamous brand, while people look upon me with reverence. I must reveal myself for what I am.}}
}}

----

12:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|No, no, Arthur. It would make my burden only the heavier to see you dishonored.}}
}}

----

12:51

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|How can I stand in my pulpit and meet the eyes of the people, who are hungry for truth, knowing in my soul that I am a living lie? Hester, we must marry.}}
}}

----

13:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Think not of us. Your duty is with the people. They've entrusted their very souls to your care. If we destroy their faith, where will they turn? What will they do?}}
}}

----

13:18

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|What can a ruined soul like mine do toward the redemption of other souls?}}
}}

----

13:23

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|You have repented. Your life is not less holy than it appears in their eyes. To destroy their faith would be a greater sin. And it would only shatter the love we bear each other. No, Arthur, it cannot be.}}
}}

----

13:42

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|But what is to become of you?}}
}}

----

13:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|My salvation and yours can come only from heaven. Our very lives must be a living penance. It is God's will.}}
}}

----

13:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|His will be done.}}
}}

----

14:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Bless you, Hester, and may you find peace.}}
}}

----

14:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|May you...find...peace.}}
}}

----

14:20

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester! Hester, what's the matter?}}
}}

----

14:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Nothing! It's been such a trying day, and I'm tired. Please. Please leave me, alone.}}
}}

----

14:52

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|The story is a strange one. Since the divine hand of providence guided you here, I bid you welcome.}}
}}

----

15:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Thank you, sire.}}
}}

----

15:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Sign the record.}}
}}

----

15:07

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Here.}}
}}

----

15:14-15:24

{{ft/i|
{{cursive block|
William Brewster<br>
Samuell Cooke<br>
Resoluad Stanley<br>
Myles Bradford<br><br>
{{smaller|Ryanrdo Eaken<br>Doctor Roger Pr}}
}}
}}

----

15:29-15:44

{{ft/i|
{{cursive block|
William Brewster<br>
Samuell Cooke<br>
Resoluad Stanley<br>
Myles Bradford<br><br>
{{smaller|Ryanrdo Eaken<br>Doctor Roger Chillingworth<ref>{{ua|A few of the names on this paper, such as "Resoluad" and "Ryanrdo", were illegitimate names that were probably deliberately written with these spellings in the movie, as they are not important bits of the text.}}</ref>}}}}
}}

----

15:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Ooh! A doctor of medicine?}}
}}

----

15:51

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Fortunately, it was my skill in that science that won the friendship of the Indians, and enabled me to make my way here.}}
}}

----

15:58

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|The Colony is indeed fortunate. We have long needed a skilled man of medicine.}}
}}

----

16:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Thank you. Now, where can I find lodging? The tavern is already filled.}}
}}

----

16:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Well, that is indeed a problem.}}
}}

----

16:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Oh, Master Dimmesdale. Master Dimmesdale!}}
}}

----

16:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Yes, sire?}}
}}

----

16:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Reverend Dimmesdale, this is Doctor Roger Chillingworth.}}
}}

----

16:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|I bid you welcome.}}
}}

----

16:28

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Thank you.}}
}}

----

16:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Master Dimmesdale, is there not an unoccupied room where you dwell at Mistress Crakstone's house?}}
}}

----

16:34

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Yes, sire, there is.}}
}}

----

16:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|I am sure that Mistress Crakstone will be pleased to let you have it.}}
}}

----

16:40

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|I'll gladly take you there.}}
}}

----

16:41

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Thank you.}}
}}

----

16:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Good to hear that you are a doctor. Mistress Prynne has suffered much today. Will you attend her?}}
}}

----

16:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|As soon as I've secured my lodging.}}
}}

----

16:54

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|It will be an act of kindness.}}
}}

----

16:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Well, that will give me pleasure, indeed.}}
}}

----

18:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Here. Drink.}}
}}

----

19:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|I have thought of death, and wished for it—would even have prayed for it where it fits that such as I should pray for anything. Yes. If death be in this cup, I bid you think well before you see me drink it.}}
}}

----

19:20

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Have no fear. My vengeance is to let you live—to give you medicines against harm, so that your burning shame may still glaze against your bosom. I will see your punishment in the eyes of men and women—yea, even in the eyes of your own misbegotten child, so.}}
}}

----

20:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Roger, I have wronged you greatly.}}
}}

----

20:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|We have wronged each other. Mine was the first wrong, for thinking that one so young could mate with one as old as I.}}
}}

----

20:23

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|You know I was frank. I felt no love for you, nor pretended any.}}
}}

----

20:26

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|True. It was my folly and your weakness. So, between you and me, the scale hangs fairly balanced. But, Hester, the man lives who has wronged us both. Who is he?}}
}}

----

20:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|That you shall never know.}}
}}

----

20:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Never? If he walked the earth, I'll find him. If he be in hell, I'll follow him.}}
}}

----

20:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|No, no! The fault is mine! You must not harm him!}}
}}

----

20:58

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Have no fear. I shall not betray him to the law. Let him hide himself in outward honor if he may. Nonetheless, he shall not escape me.}}
}}

----

21:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Roger Prynne...}}
}}

----

21:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Prynne? Roger Prynne lives no more. I demand of you that you breathe not to a human soul that you did ever call me husband. Henceforth I shall be known as Roger Chillingworth.}}
}}

----

21:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Why not announce yourself openly and cast me off at once?}}
}}

----

21:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Because I care not for the dishonor that follows the husband of a faithless woman. Therefore, let me be known to the world as one already dead.}}
}}

----

21:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|I will keep your secret.}}
}}

----

21:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|As you've kept his, I hope.}}
}}

----

21:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|And now, Hester, I leave you alone. Alone with your infant, and your shame.}}
}}

----

22:11

{{ft/s|
{{c|{{xxxx-larger|{{bl|1642}}}}}}
}}

----

22:14

{{ft/s|
{{c|{{xxxx-larger|{{bl|1647}}}}}}
}}

----

22:31

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|It would be easier to take the wheel off if we remove the water casts.}}
}}

----

22:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Squire, I was about to do so.}}
}}

----

22:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|This work would go much faster with my helper a man instead of a midget.}}
}}

----

23:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Oh, yea?}}
}}

----

23:01

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Aye, aye.}}
}}

----

23:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|My name is Sampson and I'm as strong as my name be tokened.}}
}}

----

23:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Sayest thou!}}
}}

----

23:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Sayest I.<ref>{{ua|The archaic conjugation ''{{wikt|sayest}}'', used in this {{w|running gag}} by Sampson throughout the movie for its rhythmic effect, is incorrectly applied here. The correct 17th-century first person conjugation would be "Say I."}}</ref>}}
}}

----

23:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Couldst thou unaided support the car?}}
}}

----

23:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Of a certainty.}}
}}

----

23:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Then position thyself.}}
}}

----

23:38

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Hey!}}
}}

----

23:41

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|It will take but a moment.}}
}}

----

23:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 1|Is there not a board left?}}
}}

----

23:51

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 2|I have finished, goodwife. Use mine.}}
}}

----

23:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 1|Oh, thank you. Thank you very much.}}
}}

----

23:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|What is this world coming to? Just look at this. Only five years old and beginning to wear already.}}
}}

----

24:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Young woman|I think five years' wear is good enough.}}
}}

----

24:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|That's the trouble with you young folk. You have no sense of good or bad.}}
}}

----

24:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 3|Well said, Mistress Abigail. When I was a girl, things were very different.}}
}}

----

24:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|'Tis disgraceful! Only last week Thomas Cook was seen kissing his wife on the Sabbath!}}
}}

----

24:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 3|Oh!}}
}}

----

24:20

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Young woman|Is it so sinful to love a wife on the Lord's Day?}}
}}

----

24:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|For shame! That's the work that they do to you. Take heed, young woman, lest you end up like yon miserable sinner.}}
}}

----

24:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 4|I always said her punishment was much too light!}}
}}

----

24:38

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Pearl? Pearl?}}
}}

----

24:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Young woman|She has great skill with a needle. I would that I could employ her to make my wedding garments.}}
}}

----

24:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Wedding garments? 'Tis enough that honest folk can let her earn her livelihood with her needle. But to permit her to sew on wedding garments, well, that would be an ill omen!}}
}}

----

25:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Where were you, dear?}}
}}

----

25:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Picking flowers.}}
}}

----

25:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Aren't they lovely!}}
}}

----

25:09

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Who made the flowers, Mother?}}
}}

----

25:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|God did.}}
}}

----

25:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Who made me?}}
}}

----

25:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|God the Heavenly Father made all things.}}
}}

----

25:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|I found the flowers in the ceiling. Where did you find me?}}
}}

----

25:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|I found you on a rose bush.}}
}}

----

25:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Oh!}}
}}

----

25:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Do run on, dear.}}
}}

----

25:28

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|All right.}}
}}

----

25:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 4|Look at that child, dancing like a heathen!}}
}}

----

25:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Like mother, like child! It would be better if that young one were given over to a more God-fearing woman for training.}}
}}

----

25:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Children|Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom!}}
}}

----

25:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Hey, Master Hockings.}}
}}

----

25:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Oh.}}
}}

----

25:56

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Will you repair my basket?}}
}}

----

25:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Oh, it will be a pleasure. Quite heavy.}}
}}

----

25:59

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Mistress Billings was ill. I did her washing also.}}
}}

----

26:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Hey!}}
}}

----

26:07

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|It will take but a moment!}}
}}

----

26:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Aw!}}
}}

----

26:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Children|Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom!}}
}}

----

26:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Digerie Crakstone|Halt! What are you doing here?}}
}}

----

26:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Marching.}}
}}

----

26:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Digerie Crakstone|Go away. You cannot play with us.}}
}}

----

26:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Digerie Crakstone|Go away!}}
}}

----

26:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Children|Ahahahahahahahahahaha!}}
}}

----

26:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Stop it! Stop it! Stop it!}}
}}

----

26:54

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Here you are, Mistress Prynne. 'Tis as good as new.}}
}}

----

26:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Thank you.}}
}}

----

27:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Stop it! Stop it! You should be ashamed of yourselves.}}
}}

----

27:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Digerie Crakstone|She started it. She's to blame.}}
}}

----

27:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Gasp! Digerie, come here! Who did it?}}
}}

----

27:26

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Digerie Crakstone|She did it!}}
}}

----

27:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|You little heathen! I'll teach you!}}
}}

----

27:33

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Look to your own children, Mistress! My child was not to blame!}}
}}

----

27:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Yours is to blame. If you were an honest, God-fearing woman, and brought your child up in a proper manner, this would never happen.}}
}}

----

27:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Say what you will about me—I can tolerate your insults—but lay not a hand on my child or you will rue it!}}
}}

----

27:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|How dare you speak like that to me? If you taught your child its proper place, there would be no trouble, because my children know better than to have anything to do with your brat! You're a disgrace to the Colony, and your child will end just like you. It would be a blessing if she were taken away from you, and brought up in a Christian manner.}}
}}

----

28:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Silence, Mistress Abigail!}}
}}

----

28:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|I was but telling this woman...}}
}}

----

28:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Silence, Mistress Abigail! You've said enough.}}
}}

----

28:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Thank you, Master Dimmesdale.}}
}}

----

28:23

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Come, dear.}}
}}

----

28:35

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|It is a strange child. 'Tis easy to see her mother in her. I wonder if by studying the child, one could learn who the father might be.}}
}}

----

28:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|You take the burdens of your flock too much to heart. Your health won't permit it.}}
}}

----

29:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|It's all right, Roger. I'll be all right.}}
}}

----

29:15

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|There, there. Don't cry.}}
}}

----

29:21

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Mother, why won't they let me play with them?}}
}}

----

29:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Now, now.}}
}}

----

29:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|But, Mother, I wanted to play, too.}}
}}

----

29:35

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Pearl, dear, you love your mother, don't you?}}
}}

----

29:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Of course I do.}}
}}

----

29:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Well, you would not want to go off and play and leave me all alone, would you? I like to play too.}}
}}

----

29:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Do you, Mother?}}
}}

----

29:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Of course I do. And we'll not let them play with us either, will we?}}
}}

----

29:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|No! And we'll play soldier, too! Yes! And I'll be the captain!}}
}}

----

30:01

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Okay. Now, let's see. Here's your sword.}}
}}

----

30:07

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Thank you. But where's yours?}}
}}

----

30:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne and Pearl|Hahahahaha!}}
}}

----

30:15

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne and Pearl|Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom!}}
}}

----

30:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Halt!}}
}}

----

30:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Forward! March!}}
}}

----

30:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne and Pearl|Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom!}}
}}

----

30:41

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|His Excellency Governor Bellingham demands your immediate attendance.}}
}}

----

30:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Well, what does he want me for?}}
}}

----

30:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|I do not know. Make haste.}}
}}

----

30:50

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Well, I'll be there as soon as I change my dress.}}
}}

----

30:54

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|Very well.}}
}}

----

31:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Hester Prynne, the point has been discussed whether we do well to trust your child to the guidance of one who has stumbled and fallen. The child needs to be instructed in the truths of Heaven and Earth. What can you do for her in this way?}}
}}

----

31:35

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|I can teach my child what I've learned from this.}}
}}

----

31:38

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Woman, it is because of the stain which that letter indicates we would transfer the child to other hands.}}
}}

----

31:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Nevertheless, this badge has taught me—it daily teaches me—lessons whereas my child may be the wiser and better.}}
}}

----

31:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|We shall judge for ourselves. Oh, Master Dimmesdale, examine this child and see whether she has such training as befits one of her age.}}
}}

----

32:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Come here, child. What's your name?}}
}}

----

32:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Pearl.}}
}}

----

32:16

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Can you tell me who created you?}}
}}

----

32:26

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Nobody! Mother found me on a rosebush.}}
}}

----

32:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|This is awful! We need inquire no further. For the child's welfare, she shall be taken out of your charge.}}
}}

----

32:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|No, no, no! She's mine. God gave her to me in place of all the things He's taken from me. She's my happiness, and my punishment too. You cannot take her.}}
}}

----

32:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|My poor woman, the child shall be well cared for, far better than you can do it!}}
}}

----

32:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|God gave her into my keeping, and I will not give her up!}}
}}

----

32:59

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|You speak for me. You are my pastor. You know me better than these men. You know what a mother's rights are. Speak for me. Don't let them take my baby away.}}
}}

----

33:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|There is truth in what she says. God gave her the child, and there is a sacredness in that relation.}}
}}

----

33:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|Make that plain, Master Dimmesdale.}}
}}

----

33:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|The Heavenly Father has sent this child as a blessing, and also as a punishment—a constant reminder of her fall from grace. This child was meant, above all things else, to keep her mother's soul alive. For Hester Prynne's sake, then, and no less for the poor child's sake, let us leave them as providence has seen fit to place them.}}
}}

----

34:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|You speak, my friend, with a strange earnestness.}}
}}

----

34:13

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Governor Bellingham|We will leave the matter as it now stands, providing you send the child to Reverend Dimmesdale for proper Christian training.}}
}}

----

34:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|It shall be done.}}
}}

----

34:31

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Bartholomew, wouldst thou please go away?}}
}}

----

34:34

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Ingrate! I am to try and do anything.}}
}}

----

34:38

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|I've done my courting these past five years without thy aid, and I do not need it now!}}
}}

----

34:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Five years and no progress.}}
}}

----

34:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|'Tis well-nigh impossible to court a woman with her children always present.}}
}}

----

34:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|A mere trifle.}}
}}

----

34:56

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Sayest thou.}}
}}

----

34:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Sayeth I.}}
}}

----

35:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|If thou will but let me speak for thee, the bands will be posted on the morrow.}}
}}

----

35:09

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Of a certainty?}}
}}

----

35:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Of a certainty. Remember, I will be the spokesman.}}
}}

----

35:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Thou art a friend indeed.}}
}}

----

35:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Look to your appearance.}}
}}

----

35:33

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Oh, thank you, Master Bartholomew! Would you come in?}}
}}

----

35:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Thou art a great aid, indeed.}}
}}

----

35:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|A mere trifle.}}
}}

----

35:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Mistress Crakstone, I have come on an affair of the heart.}}
}}

----

36:09

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Won't you sit down, Master Bartholomew?}}
}}

----

36:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Abigail? For well-nigh five years...}}
}}

----

36:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Digerie, Humility, come here. Study your catechism.}}
}}

----

37:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|For five years, a man has...}}
}}

----

37:30

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|A rare coincidence—'tis the selfsame courting trumpet my first husband used when he asked me to marry him.}}
}}

----

38:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|What did you say?}}
}}

----

38:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|I said, "For well-nigh five years, someone has loved thee dearly."}}
}}

----

38:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Excellent. Proceed.}}
}}

----

38:21

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Oh, Master Bartholomew.}}
}}

----

38:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|I said, "He is no longer content to worship thee in silence."}}
}}

----

38:31

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|What did she say?}}
}}

----

38:34

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|She said, "Oh, Master Bartholomew."}}
}}

----

38:41

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Speak with an open heart.}}
}}

----

38:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|I said, "Has he your permission to speak to you on a question that is close to his heart?"}}
}}

----

38:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|What did she say?}}
}}

----

38:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|She said, "Speak with an open heart." Here.}}
}}

----

39:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Will you marry me?}}
}}

----

39:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|No!}}
}}

----

39:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|She said no.}}
}}

----

39:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Good day, gentlemen.}}
}}

----

39:40

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Good day, Doctor. I see you've been gathering herbs.}}
}}

----

39:42

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|They're to make medicine for Master Dimmesdale.}}
}}

----

39:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Poor a man. People do say he is much too saintly to remain long on this earth. How is he today?}}
}}

----

39:50

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|As well as could be expected.}}
}}

----

39:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|'Tis a blessing they dwell together. Only his constant attention sustains the minister's health.}}
}}

----

40:01

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|A touching devotion, for what is more noble than a loyal friend?}}
}}

----

40:07

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Aye! What is more no-...}}
}}

----

40:33

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Is that you, Roger?}}
}}

----

40:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|How are you feeling this afternoon?}}
}}

----

40:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|No better, no worse.}}
}}

----

40:52

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Ah, have patience, my friend.}}
}}

----

40:56

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|What a peculiar-looking herb. Where did you find it?}}
}}

----

41:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|In the graveyard, on a grave that had no marker to commemorate the dead man, save these dismal leaves. Perhaps it grew from his heart, and carries some hideous secret which he had done better to confess during his lifetime.}}
}}

----

41:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Perhaps he earnestly desired it, but could not.}}
}}

----

41:28

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Why not?}}
}}

----

41:31

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Some men are kept silent by their very natures. They shrink from showing their sins to the eyes of man.}}
}}

----

41:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Even that is better than to suffer the hellish tortures of a guilty conscience.}}
}}

----

41:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Maybe so.}}
}}

----

41:59

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Arthur, as one in charge of your physical wellbeing, have all your ills been laid fairly open to me?}}
}}

----

42:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|What do you mean? Why do you ask?}}
}}

----

42:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|A bodiless sickness is often but the symptom of a spiritual alarm. If you would have me heal the body of evil, you must firstly open the trouble in your soul.}}
}}

----

42:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|If it be the soul's disease, then I commit myself to the one physician of the soul, not to you.}}
}}

----

42:41

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|I am sorry. Forgive me, Arthur.}}
}}

----

42:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|There is a woman who has none of the misery of a hidden sinfulness. Is she less miserable, think you, for the scarlet letter on her bosom?}}
}}

----

43:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|I do believe it.}}
}}

----

43:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Is Master Dimmesdale home?}}
}}

----

43:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Yes.}}
}}

----

43:13

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|I brought little Pearl for her lesson in catechism.}}
}}

----

43:33

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Master Dimmesdale?}}
}}

----

43:35

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Yes?}}
}}

----

43:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Mistress Prynne has brought the child for her lessons.}}
}}

----

43:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Oh, thank you, Abigail.}}
}}

----

43:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|I leave you with your pupil.}}
}}

----

44:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|You want to please your mother, do you not?}}
}}

----

44:07

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Yes, Master Dimmesdale.}}
}}

----

44:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Come to me, my child.}}
}}

----

44:30

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Now, pay heed to what I teach you.}}
}}

----

44:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Yes, Master Dimmesdale.}}
}}

----

44:35

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|God is the Heavenly Father. He is the Father of all children.}}
}}

----

44:40

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|But they have a real father. I want one, too.}}
}}

----

44:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|If it will make you feel any happier, think of me as your father.}}
}}

----

44:58

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|I am as a father to all my flock.}}
}}

----

45:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Do you know your letters?}}
}}

----

45:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|I know that one.}}
}}

----

45:09

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|What is it?}}
}}

----

45:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|It's the great letter A.}}
}}

----

45:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|How do you know?}}
}}

----

45:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Because Mother always wears it here.}}
}}

----

45:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|"Against thee, thee only, have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight, that thou mightst be justified when thou speak and be clear when thou judge. Behold, thou desirest truth in the inward part, and in the hidden part thou shalt make me to know thy wisdom. Behold, I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me. Purge me with hyssops, and I shall be clean. Wash me and I shall be whiter than snow. Hide thy face from my sins and blot out all my iniquity. Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me. Cast me not away from thy presence and take not the Holy Spirit from me. Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation..."}}
}}

----

46:15

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Amen!}}
}}

----

46:16

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|"...and uphold me with thy free spirit. Then will I teach transgressors thy way and sinners shall be converted unto thee. Deliver me {{SIC|my|from}} bloodguiltiness, O God, and thou God of my salvation, and my tongue shall sing aloud of thy righteousness. O Lord, open thou my lips and my mouth shall show forth thy praise, for thou desireth not sacrifice; else would I give it..."}}
}}

----

46:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman|I was not asleep.}}
}}

----

46:44

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Thine eyes were closed.}}
}}

----

46:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman|I was but meditating.}}
}}

----

46:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|To get thou on at once the way to Heaven, so well thou could find it with thine eyes closed?}}
}}

----

46:54

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|"Do good in thy good pleasure unto Zion. Build thou the walls of Jerusalem. Then shalt thou be pleased with the sacrifices of righteousness, with burnt offering and whole burnt offering, then shall they offer bullocks upon thine altar."}}
}}

----

47:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|There is one who is ill and not with us this day. So let us pray that Sister Allerton may soon be well. Heavenly Father, deliver thy child who is ill and not with us this day. If it be thy will to take one of us, take me. I, who wear the black garments of the priesthood, am utterly a pollution and a lie. Spare this righteous woman and take me, the vilest of sinners, and an abomination in thy sight. Let the words of my mouth be acceptable unto thee, O God, my strength and my redeemer.}}
}}

----

48:33

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 1|An inspired sermon.}}
}}

----

48:34

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 2|Of Godly youth, he is indeed a saint.}}
}}

----

48:38

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 3|God cannot refuse his prayers. Mistress Allerton must soon be well.}}
}}

----

48:42

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Woman 4|Yes, indeed.}}
}}

----

48:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Women|Good day.}}
}}

----

48:46

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|If our good pastor beholds such sinfulness in his own white soul, what horrid spectacle would he see in thine?}}
}}

----

48:56

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Or thine.}}
}}

----

49:07

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Mother?}}
}}

----

49:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Yes, dear?}}
}}

----

49:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Mother, may I tell Mistress Allerton the minister prays for her?}}
}}

----

49:15

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Yes, dear. We'll tell her tonight. We'll make her very happy.}}
}}

----

49:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Mistress Allerton|This one would be nice. Better leave before it's dark.}}
}}

----

49:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|I'll not leave you alone.}}
}}

----

49:51

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Mistress Allerton|It won't be for long. The doctor will soon be here.}}
}}

----

49:56

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Well, I'm praying he come. Here, drink this. 'Twill make you strong.}}
}}

----

50:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Mistress Allerton|Hester, I have greatly wronged you. Will you forgive me?}}
}}

----

50:15

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Oh!}}
}}

----

50:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Ah, you're looking better this evening. How the minister's prayers are beginning to bear fruit.}}
}}

----

50:44

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Mistress Allerton|With these prayers, and Hester Prynne's broth, it's no miracle I recovered.}}
}}

----

51:01

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|I hear good tidings of you on all hands. Only yesterday the council was debating as to whether the scarlet letter should be taken off your bosom.}}
}}

----

51:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Were I worthy to be rid of it, it would fall off of its own nature.}}
}}

----

51:13

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|But if it suits you better, then wear it.}}
}}

----

51:20

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Good night, Mistress Allerton. I will see you tomorrow.}}
}}

----

51:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Good night, Mistress Prynne.}}
}}

----

51:32

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Mistress Allerton|We have treated her most unkindly. No one ever went near her, save Master Dimmesdale. And he only went out of duty to her soul.}}
}}

----

51:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Yes, I am convinced daily he has done much for her soul.}}
}}

----

51:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|Nine o'clock and all's well! Lights out! Lights out!}}
}}

----

52:21

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|Nine o'clock and all's well!}}
}}

----

53:07

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Heavenly Father, behold in the incident, I have sinned before Heaven and in thy sight.}}
}}

----

53:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester! Hester Prynne! Is that you? Hester Prynne, is it you?}}
}}

----

53:30

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Yes.}}
}}

----

53:31

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Come up. Come hither.}}
}}

----

53:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Come!}}
}}

----

53:38

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|You have both been here before, but I was not with you.}}
}}

----

53:44

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Arthur, have you not found peace?}}
}}

----

53:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|No, nothing but despair.}}
}}

----

53:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|But the people reverence you. Does that bring you no comfort?}}
}}

----

53:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|More misery—when I look inward and see the black reality of what they idolize, I would their reverence would turn to scorn, into hatred!}}
}}

----

54:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Calm yourself. Your sin has left behind you long ago.}}
}}

----

54:11

{{ft/i|
{{c|{{xxxx-larger|A}}}}
}}

----

54:13

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Look! The letter A! The heavens proclaim my guilt.}}
}}

----

54:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Please, it's a storm. Come, Arthur, come! You should not stand here!}}
}}

----

54:24

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|No! No, no, now I stand where I should have stood five years ago, by your side!}}
}}

----

54:37

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Who's there?}}
}}

----

54:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Your good friend, Roger Chillingworth.}}
}}

----

54:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|How did you know I was here?}}
}}

----

54:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|I knew nothing of the matter. I was returning from the bedside of Mistress Allerton.}}
}}

----

55:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|My good friend, surely the Lord's work does not demand that one even so pious as you could attend his flock at such an unseemly hour as this. You must rest, else these night whimsies will draw upon you. Come, let me take you home.}}
}}

----

55:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Beadle|Ten o'clock and all's well!}}
}}

----

55:34

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Good day, Mistress Prynne. You sent for me?}}
}}

----

55:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Yes.}}
}}

----

55:44

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Pearl, dear, run out and play.}}
}}

----

55:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|All right.}}
}}

----

55:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|So Mistress Hester has a word for old Roger Chillingworth. Speak freely and I will answer.}}
}}

----

56:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Five years ago, you made me pledge secrecy to the fact that you were my husband. In doing so, I was false to the only man to whom I should have been true.}}
}}

----

56:16

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|What choice had you? My finger, pointed at this man, would have hurled him from his pulpit into a dungeon.}}
}}

----

56:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Better it had been so.}}
}}

----

56:28

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|What evil have I done the man? That he lives at all is owing to me.}}
}}

----

56:35

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|You keep him alive only to feed your vengeance! You burrow and rankle in his heart. You cause him to die daily a living death. And still, he knows you not. Better he had died at once. Have you not tortured him enough?}}
}}

----

56:52

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|No. No! I live only for that.}}
}}

----

56:58

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Be once more human. You have it at your will to pardon. Do not reject that privilege.}}
}}

----

57:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|No, Hester. Never!}}
}}

----

57:09

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Very well. Do what you will. But he shall know you and your true life.}}
}}

----

57:25

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|May I not do something for you?}}
}}

----

57:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|No, no. I'll be all right. Just going for my walk.}}
}}

----

57:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Mistress Crakstone?}}
}}

----

57:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Oh!}}
}}

----

57:59

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|I'm seeking Master Sampson. He said he would be here.}}
}}

----

58:02

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Would you sit down and wait for him?}}
}}

----

58:20

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|What it is?}}
}}

----

58:21

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|'Tis nothing at all.}}
}}

----

58:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Nothing at all? My best friend and the woman I love—for shame, thou snake in the grass!}}
}}

----

58:28

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Oh, be calm, Sampson. I can explain.}}
}}

----

58:30

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|There is not to explain! You know full well it is a sin for a man to behold a woman's...nethergarments!}}
}}

----

58:39

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Sampson!}}
}}

----

58:40

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Quiet, woman! Thou hast been dishonored.}}
}}

----

58:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|If thou hast one spark a manhood in thee, thou wilt marry this woman.}}
}}

----

58:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Aye, 'twould be the honorable thing to do.}}
}}

----

58:52

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|But thou lovest her. Thou marry her!}}
}}

----

58:54

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|After thou hast seen her nethergarment?}}
}}

----

59:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|But thou did see them also.}}
}}

----

59:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|So I did.}}
}}

----

59:12

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|But Master Bartholomew did see them first.}}
}}

----

59:15

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|True! Thou must marry the woman. I shall ask the Reverend Dimmesdale to post the bands.}}
}}

----

59:31

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|You will have to wait for him. He's gone for his walk in the woods.}}
}}

----

59:56

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Arthur! Arthur Dimmesdale! I've been looking for you. Pearl, Pearl, dear, don't go too far.}}
}}

----

1:00:06

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|I won't.}}
}}

----

1:00:10

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester. Hester, you little know what a relief it is to see you alone. Had I but one friend, or even an enemy, who knew me for what I am, my soul might keep itself alive.}}
}}

----

1:00:28

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|But I am that friend, Arthur. And you have such an enemy under the same roof with you.}}
}}

----

1:00:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|An enemy under the same roof? What do you mean?}}
}}

----

1:00:41

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Oh, Arthur, forgive me. Truth was the one virtue to which I held fast, except when your good name was questioned—then I consented to deception. I must tell you! That old man, Roger Chillingworth, was my husband.}}
}}

----

1:01:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|I might have known. The secret was told me in the natural recoil of my heart.}}
}}

----

1:01:38

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Why didn't you tell me this before?}}
}}

----

1:01:40

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|He pledged me to silence.}}
}}

----

1:01:45

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester, I can bear no more. You are strong, Hester. Advise me what to do.}}
}}

----

1:01:53

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|You must dwell no longer with this man.}}
}}

----

1:01:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|How can I avoid it?}}
}}

----

1:01:58

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Does the universe lie within comfort of yonder town? 'Tis the broad pathway of the sea that brought you here. It will bear you back again. Begin life anew! There's happiness beyond!}}
}}

----

1:02:09

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|No, it cannot be. I have not the courage to venture into a strange land alone.}}
}}

----

1:02:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|You shall not go alone.}}
}}

----

1:02:22

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester.}}
}}

----

1:02:23

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Even now, there's a vessel in the harbor. It sails the day after election. I will secretly engage passage.}}
}}

----

1:02:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Hester, this is already the new life. Why didn't we think of it sooner?}}
}}

----

1:02:34

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Let us not go back. The past is gone!}}
}}

----

1:02:47

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|I order a drink to the yonder.}}
}}

----

1:02:56

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Hey, e'eryone. Bring a small tankard of ale.}}
}}

----

1:03:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Man|Yes, sir.}}
}}

----

1:03:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|{{reconstruct|Will}} you gentlemen join us in a drink?}}
}}

----

1:03:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Nay, I am a most unhappy man.}}
}}

----

1:03:11

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|What? On election day? Why, this is the time for merrymaking!}}
}}

----

1:03:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Not for me.}}
}}

----

1:03:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|He is soon to be married.}}
}}

----

1:03:21

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Oh, that's a mere trifle! Why, I've got a wife in every port!}}
}}

----

1:03:30

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Aye, but thou art a ship's master, and well accustomed to stormy weather.}}
}}

----

1:03:36

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Well said, my boy. Well put. Well, have another drink.}}
}}

----

1:03:49

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Uh-uh! You've had enough. Mistress Abigail will be angry.}}
}}

----

1:03:55

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|That's for Abigail. I will be master in my own house.}}
}}

----

1:04:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Sampson|Sayest thou.}}
}}

----

1:04:01

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Sayeth I.}}
}}

----

1:04:04

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Digerie Crakstone|Mother wants you, and if you don't come immediately, she will come and fetch you.}}
}}

----

1:04:16

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Here's to the bride.}}
}}

----

1:04:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Pearl|Mother? What are all the people doing here at the square?}}
}}

----

1:04:52

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|They're waiting to see the procession pass. There'll be soldiers marching and drums.}}
}}

----

1:05:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Good day, Mistress! I've been seeking you!}}
}}

----

1:05:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|What is it, Captain?}}
}}

----

1:05:08

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Everything is in readiness. A cabin for you, the little girl, and one for the gentleman are open.}}
}}

----

1:05:17

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|We shall be there.}}
}}

----

1:05:18

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Yes, we're going to sail on the noon tide. And it should be a healthy voyage, with a ship surgeon and his other doctor on voyage with us.}}
}}

----

1:05:26

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Have you another passenger?}}
}}

----

1:05:28

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Captain|Yes. I suppose you know. He said he was one of your party. Chillingworth's the name. He said he's a friend of the gentleman you spoke of.}}
}}

----

1:05:40

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Yes, he knows him—well, indeed.}}
}}

----

1:06:00

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Bartholomew?}}
}}

----

1:06:01

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Yes?}}
}}

----

1:06:03

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Abigail Crakstone|Take the children by the hand.}}
}}

----

1:06:05

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Bartholomew|Yes, my love.}}
}}

----

1:06:35

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|The crowd has gathered to hear your election sermon. 'Twould be a calamity for their faith to be destroyed.}}
}}

----

1:06:58

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|What do you think they will say on the morrow, when they discover that their saintly pastor has fled with the woman of the scarlet letter? My friend, you are pale.}}
}}

----

1:07:14

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|It is well that I am sailing with you.}}
}}

----

1:07:19

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Stop! Stop!}}
}}

----

1:07:29

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|People of Massachusetts, ye that have deemed me holy, you that have loved me—behold in me the one sinner of the world. At last I stand where I should have stood five years ago, by the side of Hester Prynne!}}
}}

----

1:07:43

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|It's not true! It's not true! He accuses himself falsely! His illness has unbalanced his mind!}}
}}

----

1:07:48

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|No, no, at last I see clearly. You have seen Hester's scarlet letter and shuddered at it. But there was one among you whose brand of shame you have not seen!}}
}}

----

1:07:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Roger Chillingworth|Quiet, madman!}}
}}

----

1:07:59

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Well, at death's door, I stand before you. Look again at Hester's scarlet letter! It is the shadow of what I bear in my own heart! Stand any here who question God's judgment of a sinner? Then behold a dreadful witness of it!}}
}}

----

1:08:18

{{ft/i|
{{c|{{larger|A}}}}
}}

----

1:08:27

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Pearl. Pearl, my child. Will you kiss me?}}
}}

----

1:08:42

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Hester Prynne|Shall we not meet again? Shall we not spend our immortal lives together? Look far into eternity with your bright dying eyes and tell me, what do you see?}}
}}

----

1:08:57

{{ft/d|
{{ft|Arthur Dimmesdale|Jesus. Peace.}}
}}

----

1:09:29

{{ft/s|
{{blackletter block|
{{c|{{xxxx-larger|THE END}}<br>{{larger|''A''<br>Majestic Picture}}}}
}}
}}