In “The Minister’s Black Veil” Nathaniel Hawthorne conveys the idea that sin, whether it be your sin, secret sin, or a known sin, can sometimes lead to isolation and gives insight into people’s true character. The main character Parson Hooper was met with many confrontations in his literal representation of secret sin by wearing a black veil. In the beginning of the story, as Hooper leaves the church he dreadfully realizes the darkness and effect of the black veil which would soon lead to his own isolation. Hawthorne writes, “catching a glimpse of his figure in the looking-glass, the black veil involved his own spirit in the horror with which it overwhelmed all others.” Parson Hooper was so hurt by the people’s reaction and afraid of the black …show more content…
Their inability to show Hooper compassion when he refused to explain what the black veil signified led to their human nature and judgemental tendencies taking over. Goodman Gray, a self-proclaimed friend of Mr. Hooper made sure to voice his disdain saying, “Our Parson has gone mad!” The veil truly did reveal the character of the town’s people, by their snickering, fear, and rumors. Besides the townspeople letting their fears take over Parson Hooper’s own fiancée was driven away and let the veil come between her love. At one point she realized the separation the black veil had caused between her and her lover and was described as “fixed insensibly on the black veil, when, like a sudden twilight in the air, its terrors fell around her.” Although she was in love with him she was unable to see past the veil both literally and figuratively and felt his secrets were too monumental. Lastly, on his deathbed, Father Hooper finally explained the veil by bringing their secret sins out into the open. He had been a victim of some of their sins and said, “ Tremble also at each other! Have men avoided me, and women shown no pity, and children screamed and fled, only for my black veil?...I look around me and lo!on every visage a Black veil!” When fear and uncertainty take the forefront of a person’s decision making because of what they perceive to be wrong or sinful, it can isolate the victim if deemed by the majority as
In the short story “The Minister’s Black Veil”, fear of the unknown is used by the main character, Mr. Hooper, to draw attention to what he believed was a necessary in order to achieve salvation. He believed people should be honest and forward with God, and should avoid wearing a “veil” to hide their true faces when speaking with God. He wore the veil to symbolize the indirectness most people use to cover themselves when speaking to God. Hooper refused to remove his veil, saying he would cast aside his veil once everyone else did, Unfortunately, Hooper never explained why he choose to wear his veil, which led to an uproar of confusion in the community. The community members looked for a simple explanation for his actions. For instance, some believed he had relations with a young girl who recently died, and he was in mourning, or committed a sin so severe he refused to show his face. The community began to avoid Hooper and fear the Reverend they once respected, just because of his one unexplained action. The community began to fear him in such a way that he losses almost all the respect he held within the community, and dies without his betrothed by his side. Even upon his deathbed he refuses to share, with the community, why he chose to wear his veil. Hawthorne reveals in this short story how people crave an explanation for the abnormal, and when they fail to find a satisfactory answer, they will reject and fear the
...t to acknowledge that fact than to live your life a lie. By keeping sin secret from the world like Dimmesdale, your conscience eats at your spirit until you are no longer able to live a healthy, normal life. Hooper's demeanor and sermons scared everyone into seeing their own sins and when looking at his black veil, they saw their own faults, which petrified them for they knew they were pretending to be one of the elect, and that none of them could be perfectly sinless. The horror and the hate people felt towards both the black veil and the scarlet letter was an outward manifestation of the horror and hate they all had for their own sins. Thus it brings us back to the theme that Hawthorne makes so clear in both the Scarlet Letter and "The Minister's Black Veil," that though manifested sin will ostracize a person from society, un-confessed sin will destroy the soul.
Mr. Hooper in “The Minister’s Black Veil” puts on a veil to symbolize “those sad mysteries which we hid[e] from our nearest and dearest, and would fain conceal from our own consciousness, even forgetting that the Omniscient can detect them” (Hawthorne 310). From the moment the townsfolk see the black veil they become very frightened and intimidated by Mr. Hooper, the citizens felt that “the black veil seemed to hang down before his heart” (Hawthorne 308). People became very frightened even the “most innocent girl, and the man of hardened breast” (Hawthorne 312) Mr. Hooper puts this crape on as a “symbol of a fearful secret between him and them” and because of this society chastises him and makes him out to be a...
For example, the main character in “The Minister’s Black Veil,” Mr. Hooper, is the town’s parson who one day, wore a black veil “swathed about his forehead, and hanging down his face, so low as to be shaken by his breath” ("The Minister's Black Veil"). His common friends and neighbors expressed ghastly from his sudden change in appearance such as: an old woman muttered, “he has changed himself into something awful,” and “‘our parson has gone mad’ cried Goodman Gray” ("The Minister's Black Veil"). Additionally, many people were mystified and offended by his persistent presence with the black veil, even at a funeral “when Mr. Hooper came, the first thing that [the guests’] eyes rested on was the same horrible black veil, which added deeper gloom to the funeral” ("The Minister's Black Veil"). Eventually, Hooper became an outcast after refusing to remove the veil for anyone, even his wife, and his life ended alone as “a veiled corpse” ("The Minister's Black
The Minister’s Black Veil is an allegory by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The symbolism in this allegory (the minister’s black veil) is the focus of the story, and the title itself. He will later highlight the fact that everyone has a secret sin. This story has heavy focus on faith, the Puritan one. The whole story is about faith, and the secret sin that everyone has within. To add onto that point, the main character
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “The Minister’s Black Veil” is about Parson Hooper, a Milford minister, and his black veil. One day, he arrives at mass on the Sabbath with a black veil covering his eyes. The townspeople immediately begin to question; some saying their “parson has gone mad,” while others believe he is covering a sin (1312). The Minister, however, disregards his own strange appearance and the shocked and curious whispering of the townspeople.
In the Minister's Black Veil, there are many secrets both literal and metaphorical. These secretive aspects are not only centered on the minister himself but on all the townspeople. To reflect the hidden sins within himself, he has chosen to wear the black veil for the rest of his life, but he reminds those that all God's creations have the same hidden sins, and therefore, instead of them wearing a black veil like Mr. Hooper does, they hide their sins behind a false front, almost like wearing a mask. The importance of individual freedom in the sense that each person has the right to choose for himself is a characteristic of American Romanticism. According to this example, “When Mr. Hooper came, the first thing that their eyes rested on was
In the story we read during class, “The Minister’s Black Veil” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the author used the black veil in many different ways. He used it in a positive, negative, and neutral way in his story. As we read the text we noticed that the meaning of the black veil had changed drastically from good to bad. Of course, the black veil was a very important factor to not only the story, but also Mr.Hooper who is the main character in the story.
This black veil of Hooper’s was not only a symbol of his own sin, but a reminder to each person in his village of their own individual sins. Near the end of the short story, Hooper cries “Lo! On every visage, a black veil,” (248) Which referred to everyone around him, as they are all sinners just the same. It was the point Hooper truly wanted to make with his veil. However, no one wanted to admit it as Hooper had, as it was unorthodox. “You know not how lonely I am, and how frightened to be alone behind my black veil.” (245) Up until Hooper’s death, no one ever worked up the courage to stand with him and admit their own sins. As a whole the Puritans were more willing to leave him isolated than try to understand
“The Minister's Black Veil,” tells the tale of a reverend. The author, Nathaniel Hawthorne, introduces this character named Mr. Hooper as “a gentlemanly person, of about thirty, though still a bachelor, was dressed with due clerical neatness, as if a careful wife had starched his band, and brushed the weekly dust from his Sunday's garb”. Hawthorne develops the theme of hidden sins through Mr. Hopper that wears a black veil that could resembles a man hiding his past sins. Many people do not understand or even accept the veil over his face. Nathaniel Hawthorne pictures the parson wearing the black veil and delivering his sermon along with a confused congregation including a elder woman who says, “‘I don’t like it. He has changed himself into something awful only by hiding his face'”(294). Others cry, ‘”Our parson is going mad'”(294)! The sermon in which he speaks that day is “…darker than usual…”(294), and also gives a gloomy feeling. The parson speaks of a secret sin; the audience soon relates the sermon to why he is wearing his black veil. The congregation feels that the sermon is given by someone else through Mr. Hopper’s body. As a result, the minister’s black veil is the talk of the town after the disturbing sermon
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 1836 short story The Minister’s Black Veil is surrounded around the ideas of sin, humanity, secrecy, death and how each effects one another. In the story, the most important component which encompasses the entirety of the story is that of the Black Veil. Hawthorne uses the veil as a symbol of secret sin. Through his character Reverend Hooper, Hawthorne communicates to his audience that everyone withholds a secret sin. The question that many critics feel needs to be answered is if the Reverend wears the veil to confess or accept his secret sin, or if he is using himself as a visual moral lesson to his fellow people that not only he hides behind a veil but so do they. This though is not actually all that important to
The story “The Minister’s Black Veil” is symbolic of the hidden sins that we hide and separate ourselves from the ones we love most. In wearing the veil Hooper presents the isolation that everybody experiences when they are chained down by their own sins. He has realized that everybody symbolically can be found in the shadow of their own veil. By Hooper wearing this shroud across his face is only showing the dark side of people and the truth of human existence and nature.
Throughout Nathaniel Hawthorne 's literary work, The Minister 's Black Veil, the sensation of the veil, the separation it creates from good things in life, and the persistence of the black veil on earth symbolize sin in mankind. During the whole parable, Mr. Hooper is restrained by the black veil and cannot live a free, enjoyable life. Also, people around him cannot tolerate the overwhelming, dark feeling that the black veil generates. Similarly, sin can take over people’s lives and create a feeling of hopelessness and gloom. Hawthorne’s parable overall demonstrates power and impact of sin on
In the short story, “The Minister’s Black Veil,” Nathaniel Hawthorne tells the Mr. Hooper’s black veil and the words that can describe between him and the veil. Hawthorne demonstrates how a black veil can describe as many words. Through the story, Hawthorne introduces the reader to Mr. Hooper, a parson in Milford meeting-house and a gentlemanly person, who wears a black veil. Therefore, Mr. Hooper rejects from his finance and his people, because they ask him to move the veil, but he does not want to do it. In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “The Minister’s Black Veil”, Mr. Hooper’s black veil symbolizes sins, darkness, and secrecy in order to determine sins that he cannot tell to anyone, darkness around his face and neighbors, and secrecy about the black veil.
In “The Minister’s Black Veil”, Nathaniel Hawthorne uses Hooper’s isolation to reveal the judgemental assumptions and moral values of the community. By assuming of the different possibilities of a sin he could have committed, the community demonstrates their true colors. When Hooper first arrives, they are swift to imagine that a grave sin is the purpose for the black veil. Also, by isolating Hooper, the town demonstrates how judgemental they are and how important appearances are to them. Finally, the community fails to realize the intention of the veil by constantly speculating the sin that causes Hooper to wear the veil.