Preview

The Minister's Black Veil

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
344 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Minister's Black Veil
Lisa C. Burns
English102
April 07, 2013

The Minister's Black Veil

“But what has good Parson Hooper got upon his face?” (pg.1). This the first peak we get of the black veil that obscures the minister's face; through the sexton, in Nathaniel Hawthorne's “The Minister's Black Veil”. We can also determine what kind of man the minister was by his own actions, his words, and what others say of him. Hawthorne tells the story of good Parson Hooper, a minister who one day decides to cover his face with a black veil for unknown reasons. No one seems to understand why good Parson Hooper, a beloved gentleman, kind hearted and respected hides his face from the world.
The story begins on Sunday morning, and good Parson Hooper is making his way to the church to delivery his sermon to his congregation. However, this day is different from any other. Good Parson Hooper arrives at the church wearing a black veil that covers all his face except his mouth and chin. This not only starts a stir amongst the parishioners about the abstracted minister, but also the townspeople of Milford.
As the day progresses these people begin to wonder about this veil; and wonder what's going on with good Minister Hooper. Minister Hooper, whose known to have “a reputation of a good preacher” (pg.3), has now become ostracized by the same people who love and respect him. Nevertheless, good Minister Hooper goes on with his day. He attends a funeral, and marries a couple still wearing this black veil. However, his character remains the same; pleasant and cheerful. He is questioned by his wife to be Elizabeth about the veil; and though “it grieved him to the very depth of his kind heart” (pg.7), he would not remove it.
Though Father Hooper dies “a man so given to prayer, of such blameless example, holy in deed and thought, so far as mortal judgment may pronounce” (pg.9). He dies with the black veil still upon his face. No one understands

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Hooper’s congregation possess too much pride and cannot accept that every human is flawed. Suddenly, the minister dons a veil upon his face with no explanation, and although he wears a simple piece of fabric, the townspeople begin to gossip about and avoid him. “But that piece of crape, to their imagination, seemed to hang down before his heart, the symbol of a fearful secret between him and them” (Hawthorne 6). They cannot accept Mr. Hooper’s veil because he has the bravery to publicly display his own immorality when his duty as a minister is to represent a holy person free of sin. As a role model of society, a minister guides the lives of others. If a person of God can have flaws, then the average person can most definitely be flawed as well, and a Puritan cannot sin if they want to go to Heaven. Therefore, admitting that all humans have flaws would mean their straight and narrow Puritan lifestyle holds no significance. Just as Mr. Hooper’s congregation cannot admit their own flaws, The characters in Poe’s story have the inability to accept that they can fall victim to death and disease. In The Masque of the Red Death, Prince Prospero and his revelers have an excessive amount of pride, which leads to them believing that they can cheat out death. They lock themselves within a castellated abbey, where “There were buffoons, there were improvisatori, there were ballet-dancers, there were musicians, there was beauty,…

    • 1398 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    American Lit Unit 8

    • 562 Words
    • 3 Pages

    4. What is the principle appeal of Hawthorne's work? It is in the quality of its allegory, always richly ambivalent, providing enigmas which each reader solves in his or her own terms.…

    • 562 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In The Minister’s Black Veil, Nathaniel Hawthorne explores 1 Corinthians 13:12 by looking at a Puritan minister, wearing a dark veil and his congregation’s responses, implying that everyone wears a dark veil to cover themselves, whether actually visible or not. The story embodies the verse and shows the reader a new aspect of it. In the tale, the minister reveals that he is using the veil to illustrate the veil everyone views the world through, and that no one removes the veil until death.…

    • 341 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the Minister’s Black Veil, Mr. Hooper attires the black veil because he is bearing the burden of other’s sins. Mr. Hooper refrains from being hypocritical; he knows he also has sins, but he confesses to them and does not pretend as if they don’t exist. Ultimately, being the minister, Mr. Hooper is responsible for the sins other people commit and will not face on their own. He is leader of the congregation, however, everyone sins by nature, and Mr. Hooper may also have sins he does not confess to. As a leader, he was given the black veil to wear for committing the sin, confessing it was done, and showing the other people in the congregation that because he is the minister, he is carrying their weight, or bearing their burden, for the sins they have committed but not yet confessed to.…

    • 1035 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Minister’s Black Veil” by Nathaniel Hawthorne and “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe were wrote in the Dark Romanticism Period. Dark Romanticism is a literary subgenre of Romantic Literature that emerged from the transcendental philosophical movement popular in nineteenth-century America. So, what is the characteristics of Dark Romanticism? The characteristics of the Dark Romanticism are the belief in sin and evil, the struggles of human nature, and the focus on the tragic. The dark romantic view countered the optimism of transcendental writers.…

    • 453 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    A writer his entire life, Ames uses his best tool as a measure to insure that his son know something of his life, even if Ames has passed away years before the son ever gets a chance to read the letter. The novel reads somewhat like a diary, a spiritual one at that. At every corner scriptures are referenced or Ames’ faith somehow fits into the narration. Robinson very easily transmits Ames’ constant remembrance of Christianity by plucking in allusions to God, the Church, or his work, not to mention the almost over-usage of the word “Christlike”. Religion very early on is dealt with as an important subject and as the book continues, it gains more and more time in the spotlight. While initially one could think that the novel would focus less with the nature of Christianity, since Ames even says that he does not with to persuade his son to follow his footsteps in the Ministry – even if he does point out some of its “advantages”[1] – as it roles forward, the focus drifts ever closer to God and how the world itself reminds Ames of the sacred. The narrator’s descriptive tendencies, in themselves are also a way Robinson finds to allude to the religious. They are Ames’ way of referencing God’s work, attempting to capture the magnificence that he sees in the world, and transmitting it to his son via words, much like God did to Moses. All that is beautiful, all that is right, it would there seem, is thanks to the Almighty. Robinson uses a very poetic tone in her writing of this novel, which helps connect the secular with the divine and emphasizes even more the novel’s religious…

    • 2159 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ambiguity is a theme that runs through many narratives and due to itss nature can serve multiple purposes. At this moment, ambiguity will be explored in, “The Minister’s Black Veil” by Nathanial Hawthorne. The short story is about Parson Hooper, a minister for a small town, who suddenly dawns a black veil across his face and refuses to remove it for any reason. As a result, the townspeople begin to gossip and change the way they act. Through the nature of sin, Hooper’s life, and the purpose of the veil, ambiguity exists.…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Minister’s Black Veil” takes place in a typical Puritan village in New England. The majority of the people in this Puritan village live very strict lives, emphasizing hard work and religious devotion. One member of this village, Reverend Mr. Hooper, is the main focus in the story because of his black veil on his face that reveals nothing but his mouth and chin. Because of this black veil, many people start to change their attitude and feelings towards him. Some people begin to fear him, others make the assumption that he is mentally unstable; his fiancé leaves him, but others realize that he has a logical principle behind all this. In “The Minster’s…

    • 800 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Ygbquestions

    • 268 Words
    • 1 Page

    1. What is revealed in the first seven paragraphs about the characters of Goodman Brown and Faith?…

    • 268 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hooper is sought to be tough. The idea of the connection between god and a pasture is set to be complete. When others believe you are in the hands of an angry god, you kind of make your pasture-like ways go to waste like a pasture wearing black veil… Oh wait, that's Mr. Hooper. Within the connections of God and the connections of his fiancée, the biggest conclusions that can be drawn are his intentions of Integrating with another female, or doing something that is sinful for a pastures right and wills of god. If Mr. Hooper is shameless of his actions, he wouldn’t have told his fiancée he could not remove the veil, and would've trusted her pardon to identify why the veil was being worn in the first place. Mr. Hooper wishes to teach a moral lesson to his congregation by wearing a veil that only each man and woman can interpret according to their own consciences. This is not impeccable by conceding information. Mr. Hooper has no rights or morals to teach. He only lives in the sight of sin now that he has committed something that is by far the worst of a pastures creation. All in all, he has seen too much and from now on, lives in the void of darkness sin and angry…

    • 856 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The old woman stood with eyes uplifted in her Sunday–go–to–meeting clothes: high shoes polished about the tops and toes, a long rusty dress adorned with an old corsage, long withered, and the remnants of an elegant silk scarf as head rag stained with grease from the many oily pigtails underneath. Perhaps she had known suffering. There was a dazed and sleepy look in her aged blue–brown eyes. But for those who searched hastily for "reasons" in that old tight face, shut now like an ancient door, there was nothing to be read. And so they gazed nakedly upon their own fear transferred; a fear of the black and the old, a terror of the unknown as well as of the deeply known. Some of those who saw her there on the church steps spoke words about her that were hardly fit to be heard, others held their pious peace; and some felt vague stirrings of pity, small and persistent and hazy, as if she were an old collie turned out to die (section 3.1).…

    • 909 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lurking guilt and shame, if not acknowledged and owned up to, can consume you. “‘I wonder he is not afraid to be alone with himself!’” (Hawthorne). The people that attended Reverend Hooper’s church were concerned, frightened, and intrigued about why he was suddenly wearing a black veil to cover his face. What was speculated about him not wanting to be alone with himself is true because he was getting caught up in his own guilt that he felt he needed to hide it from everyone in an attempt to hide it from himself. “At that instant, 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” (Hawthorne). At the wedding, Reverend Hooper finally saw himself in the mirror and, for the first time, saw how caught up in his guilt and shame he was, and how by not owning…

    • 690 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dialectic Journal

    • 829 Words
    • 4 Pages

    “He looked back and saw the head of Faith still peeping after him, with a melancholy air, in spite of her pink ribbons”…

    • 829 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “Good Country People,” Manley Pointer appears to be a young misperceived country boy who sells bibles, but this is an illusion of appearance versus reality. Pointer is so heavily weighted down by his suitcase that he is lopsided and has to “brace himself to prevent collapsing” making him appear to be misbalanced like Joy who is also known as Hulga. This heaviness foreshadows a quality of falsehood that one carries that makes their mind, soul, and body heavy. Misplaced faith in appearances is central to the themes of this story. Appearance and deception conflict with reality and truth, as Pointer assures Mrs. Hopewell that he is like her and can exchange generalizations about “good country people” as readily as Mrs. Freeman. The biblical quotation, Matthew 10:30, foreshadows the story’s ironic ending. Mrs. Hopewell prides herself in not being taken for a fool, but this boy seemed “so sincere, so genuine and earnest.” In a way, both literally and ironically, Pointer is a missionary, though not as Mrs. Hopewell believes. He delivers the message that not all people are what they appear to be.…

    • 1705 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Curtis Hartman, a reverend at the Presbyterian Church in the town of Winesburg, is a deeply religious man, whom acquaintances have a lot of respect for. Though an experienced minister of ten years, Hartman still finds himself nervous and uncomfortable in front of his congregation. However, the reverend has the conviction that through intense spiritual and dutiful ways, he will become both a better messenger of God and a happier individual. While preparing a sermon - in the bell tower of the church -for Sunday morning, Curtis Hartman feels a strange and foreign desire to "peep" and spy upon the half-dressed body of neighbor Kate Swift. The young woman is a smoker, which bothers the reverend, who sets out to "carry a message to her soul" through his sermons, in hopes that through spiritual engagement, she will lose this nasty habit. Hartman is greatly troubled and confounded as to why he continues to have this obsession with this woman, and not with his own wife and the word of God. In a drastic effort to "grope [his] way out of the darkness into the light of righteousness," the main character sits in the bell tower during a snowstorm, and openly defies the distraction the Ms. Swift presents, exclaiming that he will not look at her through the open window right beside him. The woman, to Curtis's pleasure, now begins to end each evening with a prayer; and consequently, having seen the success of his sermons, puts the reverend at ease. However, more importantly, the reverend finds that his specific experience parallels the same "temptations that assail" the general congregation and that having these commonplace feelings are what truly liberated his sole, not a steadfast connection with God. Hartman is now a happier person, because of a stronger relationship with his wife and a strengthened connection with God. The reverend sees that while following the holy word is important, it is also equally important for him not to be crushed by "the strength of…

    • 334 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays