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Study Guide Prepared by Michael J.
Cummings...©
2012
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Type of Work
......."The Minister's
Black Veil" is a short story centering on the need
for human beings to acknowledge their sins. It is
sometimes categorized as a dark romance.
Publication
.......The story
first appeared in 1836 in The Token and the
Atlantic Souvenir, a collection of prose and
poetry edited by Samuel Goodrich and published in
Boston by Charles Bowen. The story begins on page
302.
Setting.....
.......The action takes place in a small
Puritan town in colonial New England. The name of
the town is Milford. Whether it is a fictional town
or the name of a real town—such as Milford, Maine;
Milford, Massachusetts; or Milford Connecticut—is
uncertain.
Puritanism began in England in the late sixteenth
century when Protestant reformers attempted to purge
the Church of England (or Anglican Church) of the
elaborate ceremonies, rituals, and hierarchical
structure it retained from the Roman Catholic Church
after King Henry VIII established Anglicanism by
acts of Parliament between 1529 and 1536.
The Act of Supremacy, approved in 1534, officially
established the Church of England as an independent
Protestant entity separate from the Roman Catholic
Church. However, the Church of England retained
Catholic rituals such as the mass and prelates such
as bishops. For the Puritans, the pure word of the
Bible, presented in part through inspired preaching,
took precedence over rituals while direct revelation
from the Holy Spirit superseded reason. After Queen
Elizabeth I died in 1603, the Puritans petitioned
the new monarch, King James I, to adopt their
reforms. In January 1604 at a special conference at
Hampton Court Palace near London, the king rejected
most of the proposed Puritan reforms but he did
grant a Puritan request for a new translation of the
Bible, which resulted in publication of the King
James Version in 1611.
Many disenchanted Puritans left
the country. Those who remained behind joined with
members of Parliament opposed to the crown's
economic policies. Together they defeated the king's
forces in the English Civil War. With the king out
of the way, the Puritans became a dominant faction
in the new Commonwealth government headed by Oliver
Cromwell. However, after Cromwell's death in 1558, a
movement to restore the monarchy began, and King
Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660. Under
the Clarendon Code, approved in 1662, the Church of
England expelled all Puritan ministers who refused
to accept church tenets. Many Puritans then
emigrated to America and established their brand of
religion in Massachusetts and other colonies.
......."The Minister's Black Veil"
takes place after the Puritans established
themselves in New England.
Characters
The Rev.
Mr. Hooper: Minister in a
Puritan community with a meetinghouse. One Sunday, he
wears a black veil over his face while presiding at
services in his church. Thereafter, he never removes
the veil. His appearance on the streets unnerves the
townspeople and casts a pall of gloom over the
community.
Elizabeth: Mr. Hooper's
wife-to-be.
Goodman
Gray: Member of Mr. Hooper's congregation.
Squire
Saunders: Parishioner who usually invites Mr.
Hooper to Sunday dinner.
Sexton:
Church officer who rings the bell and maintains the
building.
Old Woman: Parishioner who
thinks Mr. Hooper's veil has changed him into
"something awful."
Physician: Parishioner who
suggests that Mr. Hooper may suffer from a mental
debility.
Physician's
Wife: Parishioner who observes that the black
veil has become "a terrible thing" on Mr. Hooper's
face.
Deceased
Girl: Young woman at whose funeral Mr. Hooper
presides.
Superstitious
Woman: Woman who observes Mr. Hooper leaning over
the corpse of the deceased girl.
Funeral-Procession Partners: Man and
woman who have a feeling that Mr. Hooper and the
spirit of the deceased girl are walking hand in hand
during the funeral procession.
Young
Couple: Bride and groom at whose wedding Mr.
Hooper presides. They tremble at the sight of Mr.
Hooper's veil.
Delegation
of Parishioners: Church members who go to Mr.
Hooper's house to learn why he wears a veil.
Church
Deacons: Parishioners at the bedside of Mr.
Hooper when he is dying.
The Rev.
Mr. Clark: Minister from another community who
ministers at the bedside of the dying Mr. Hooper.
Point of View
.......Hawthorne presents
most of the story in objective third-person point of
view. However, he occasionally uses omniscient
third-person point of view to reveal the thoughts of
characters. Here are examples of the latter.
Each member of the congregation,
the most innocent girl, and the man of
hardened breast, felt as if the preacher had
crept upon them, behind his awful veil, and
discovered their hoarded iniquity of deed or
thought.
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.
With self-shudderings and
outward terrors, he walked continually in its
shadow, groping darkly within his own soul, or
gazing through a medium that saddened the
whole world.
Tone
The tone is somber,
gloomy, and ominous, as the following sentence
indicates: "When Mr.
Hooper came, the first thing that their eyes
rested on was the same horrible black veil,
which had added deeper gloom to the funeral, and
could portend nothing but evil to the wedding.
Such was its immediate effect on the guests that
a cloud seemed to have rolled duskily from
beneath the black crape, and dimmed the light of
the candles."
Plot Summary
The
sexton
rings the bell to summon the faithful to the Sunday
service in the Milford meetinghouse. After they
gather in front of the church, the Rev. Mr. Hooper
approaches. His appearance surprises everyone.
“Are you sure it is our parson?”
Goodman Gray asks the sexton. The latter is certain.
Hooper, a bachelor of thirty,
wears his neat Sunday clothes as usual. But over his
face hangs a veil of crepe covering everything
except his mouth and chin. Because it is sheer, he
can see through it. One woman comments that he has
“changed himself into something awful.” Goodman Gray
says he has “gone mad.”
After the congregation assembles,
Hooper presents a psalm, reads from the Scriptures,
and prays. All the while, everyone wonders why he is
hiding his face. More than one woman gets up and
leaves.
Hooper preaches his sermon in his
usual manner—without thunder, without drama—but with
quiet persuasion. It is a powerful sermon, the most
powerful one he ever preached. It centers on “secret
sin,” the narrator says, the kind a person hides
even from people close to him. The congregation,
well familiar with his subject, becomes
uncomfortable. Some begin shaking.
After the service, some of the
parishioners exchange whispers outside the church,
and some go home in deep thought. Others laugh.
Several shake their heads to signal their inability
to understand what they saw. There are those
who think Hooper wears the veil to shade his eyes,
tired and weakened by midnight reading. When the
pastor emerges from the church, he greets his flock
and blesses the children. But no one walks by his
side. Nor does old Squire Saunders invite him to his
Sunday dinner table, as the squire is wont to do.
In the afternoon, Hooper presides
at a funeral for a young girl. He prays for her, for
the mourners, and for all human beings who must
remove the veil from their faces at “the dreadful
hour.” In the procession to the cemetery, a woman
looks back at Hooper and tells the man next to her,
“I had a feeling that the minister and the maiden's
spirit were walking hand in hand.” The man says he
had the same feeling.
That evening, Hooper is to
preside at the wedding of a young couple. When he
arrives, the wedding party is horrified to see that
he is still wearing the veil. It casts a pall of
gloom over the gathering. Is it an evil omen?
Standing before the minister, the
bride trembles and becomes pale. Someone whispers
that the young girl buried that afternoon had
returned to marry. After the ceremony, the minister
cheerfully raises a glass of wine in toast to the
newlyweds. But when he sees himself in a mirror, the
image of the veil unnerves him. He spills his wine
and runs out.
The next day, the minister is the
talk of the town—in homes, on streets, in the
tavern. But no one asks him why he is wearing the
veil. In the past, he was always approachable;
anyone could talk with him. Now, the mystery of the
veil tongue-ties everyone. Finally, however, the
people send a delegation to make the inquiry. Hooper
greets its members cordially. After they sit down,
he waits for them to state their business. But the
veil intimidates them; it represents a frightful
secret between him and them. Confused, unable to
form words to explain their mission, they simply sit
there. If only he would remove the veil. Finally,
they get up and report back to fellow parishioners,
saying such a weighty matter requires the attention
of a council of churches or a synod.
However, there is one person who
is not afraid to question him—his wife-to-be,
Elizabeth. After they meet, she says, “No, there is
nothing terrible in this piece of crape,” then asks
him why he wears it. He replies that an hour will
come when “all of us shall cast aside our veils.”
Until then, he says, he will continue to wear his.
The veil
is a symbol, he says, which he must always wear; it
separates him from the world. No human being will
ever see it removed, and even Elizabeth may not look
behind it. She tells him that others may think he is
hiding a secret sin, then asks him again to remove
it to avoid scandal.
"If I hide my face for sorrow, there is cause
enough," he replies; "and if I cover it for secret
sin, what mortal might not do the same?"
She sat for a while, thinking.
Is he mentally ill? As she gazes at the veil, she
suddenly feels its terrors and rises, trembling. He
begs her not to abandon him. Although the veil must
cover his face, he says, there is no veil between
their souls. When she asks him once more to lift the
veil, he refuses.
“Then farewell,” she says.
Thereafter, a few people regard
the veil as a mere eccentricity. But most of the
townsfolk regard it as a bizarre or even sinister
presence. Some people avoid him; others go out of
their way to observe him as a strange curiosity. The
terror of children at seeing him convinces him that
the veil holds an otherworldly power. He himself
refuses to look into a mirror or into still water.
Rumors arise that he wears it to hide a heinous
crime. Perhaps wraiths hover around him.
However, the veil gives him a power that enables
him to reach sinners. When they repent, they tell
him that they, too, were once behind a black veil;
now they stand in the light of God. The dying ask
for him to comfort them even though they fear the
veil. Strangers come from afar to attend his
services. The government calls on him to preach
the election sermon before legislators, and the
laws they enact later are “characterized
by all the gloom and piety of our earliest
ancestral sway.”
But suspicion and fear of him
continue to persist. When people are well in spirit
and body, they avoid him. But when they need him to
minister to them, they send for him. “Father Hooper”—for that is
what they begin calling him—is only too happy to
heed their call. Years pass and his turn comes to
face death. Parishioners and physician gather
at his bedside. A young minister—the Rev. Mr.
Clark—rides from Westbury to pray over him. A nurse
is there, too—Elizabeth.
Clark informs Hooper that the
hour of death is at hand. But he reaches down to
remove the veil, the dying man places both his hands
on it and says it cannot be removed on earth. The
young minister then asks what terrible sin is on his
soul. Hooper musters energy in his feeble body and
sits up. What makes the veil so fearsome? he asks.
He says,
When
the friend shows his inmost heart to his friend; the
lover to his best beloved; when man does not vainly
shrink from the eye of his Creator, loathsomely
treasuring up the secret of his sin; then deem me a
monster, for the symbol beneath which I have lived,
and die! I look around me, and, lo! on every visage
a Black Veil!"
After he dies, they place him in a coffin
and bury him—his face still shrouded by the veil.
Many more years pass. The narrator says, “Good Mr. Hooper's face is dust; but awful
is still the thought that it mouldered beneath the
Black Veil!”
Was a Crime Committed?
While writing a review of Hawthorne's short
stories, Edgar Allan Poe raised the possibility
that the Rev. Mr. Hooper committed a crime
involving the young lady who was buried on the day
that Hooper began wearing his veil. Poe's article
appeared in Graham's Magazine of May 1842.
In it, he said, “The moral put into the mouth of
the dying minister will be supposed to convey the
true import of the narrative;
and that a crime of dark dye (having reference to
the 'young lady') has been committed, is a point
which only minds congenial with that of the author
will perceive.
In the story,
Hawthorne himself hints in the following passage
that there may have been something between Hooper
and the girl:
The bearers went heavily forth,
and the mourners followed, saddening all the street,
with the dead before them, and Mr. Hooper in his
black veil behind.
"Why do you
look back?" said one in the procession to his
partner.
"I had a
fancy," replied she, "that the minister and the
maiden's spirit were walking hand in hand."
"And so had I,
at the same moment," said the other.
Climax
.......The climax occurs when the Rev. Mr. Hooper
sits up on his deathbed and says everyone in the
room is wearing a veil.
Themes
The
Need to Acknowledge Sin
.......Wearing a veil is the Rev. Mr. Hooper's way
of calling attention to the tendency of human beings
to keep secret their shameful thoughts and sinful
behavior. To earn a heavenly reward, people must
lift their veils, reveal their faults—at least to
God—and repent.
Alienation
.......In executing his plan to save souls, the
Rev. Mr. Hooper alienates himself from his fellow
human beings. As the narrator says, “It [the veil] had separated him from cheerful
brotherhood and woman's love, and kept him in that
saddest of all prisons, his own heart.
Ambiguity
.......The people are at a
loss to explain why the Rev. Mr. Hooper wears the
black veil. Consequently, they guess at the cause.
“Thus,” says the narrator, “from beneath the black
veil, there rolled a cloud into the sunshine, an
ambiguity of sin or sorrow, which enveloped the poor
minister, so that love or sympathy could never reach
him.”
Reform
and Repentance
.......The minister's veil
causes people to repent their sins and reform their
lives. The narrator says,
By the aid
of his mysterious emblem—for there was no other
apparent cause—[the Rev. Mr. Hooper] became a man
of awful power over souls that were in agony for
sin. His converts always regarded him with a dread
peculiar to themselves, affirming, though but
figuratively, that, before he brought them to
celestial light, they had been with him behind the
black veil.”
Sinners on their deathbeds
send for Mr. Hooper. And, says the narrator,
Once,
during Governor Belcher's administration, Mr.
Hooper was appointed to preach the election
sermon. Covered with his black veil, he stood
before the chief magistrate, the council, and the
representatives, and wrought so deep an
impression, that the legislative measures of that
year were characterized by all the gloom and piety
of our earliest ancestral sway.

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Figures of Speech
.......Following are
examples of figures of speech in The Veil.
For definitions of figures of speech, see Literary Terms.
Alliteration
The sexton stood in the
porch of Milford meeting-house
Children,
with bright
faces, tripped merrily
beside
their parents, or mimicked a
graver gait,
Spruce
bachelors looked sidelong at the
pretty maidens, and fancied that
the Sabbath sunshine made them
prettier than
on week days.
The cause
of so much amazement may appear
sufficiently
slight.
The subject had
reference to secret sin
he well-nigh lost his wits by his own waggery.
Anaphora
His
frame shuddered, his
lips grew white
Metaphor
C
Thus, from beneath the black veil, there
rolled a cloud into the sunshine, an ambiguity of
sin or sorrow, which enveloped the poor minister,
so that love or sympathy could never reach him.
Comparison
of
ambiguity to a cloud
It had separated him from cheerful
brotherhood and woman's love, and kept him in that
saddest of all prisons, his own heart.
Comparison
of
his heart to a prison
Onomatopoeia
The children babbled
of it on their way to school.
Father
Hooper's breath . . . rattled
in his throat
Personification
Such were the terrors of the black veil,
even when Death had bared his visage!
Comparison
of
Death to a person
Simile
Mr.
Hooper raised a glass of wine to his lips,
wishing happiness to the newmarried couple in a
strain of mild pleasantry that ought to have
brightened the features of the guests, like a
cheerful gleam from the hearth.
Comparison of
pleasantry to a gleam from the hearth
He even
smiled again—that same sad smile, which always
appeared like a faint glimmering of light,
proceeding from the obscurity beneath the
veil.
Comparison
of
the smile to a light
Her eyes
were fixed insensibly on the black veil, when,
like a sudden twilight in the air, its terrors
fell around her.
Comparison
of
terrors to twilight
Source
.......Hawthorne based his
story on undocumented accounts of an incident
involving the Rev. Joseph Moody (1700-1753), of York,
Maine. Moody was said to have worn a handkerchief over
his face most of his life as a result of the lingering
guilt he felt for accidentally shooting a friend when
Moody was eight years old. However, Richard Bowen, a
program specialist for the Museum of Old York,
conducted research indicating Moody wore the
handkerchief for a different reason and perhaps for a
limited amount of time. Bowen wrote: "He wore a white
handkerchief for an undetermined time after the Fall
of 1738, when he had a mental and physical breakdown.
This breakdown occurred after the death of his wife
and newborn daughter in childbirth and after many
years of overwork and a lifetime of Puritan guilt,
introspection, and bouts of depression.”
Apparently there
is no evidence directly linking Moody's wearing of the
handkerchief to the accidental death of his friend.
Work Cited
Bowen,
Richard. “Museum of Old York explores Handkerchief
Moody myth.” 11 March 2012 25 Feb. 2009
<http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20090225- ...........LIFE-902250326.>.
Study Questions and Writing
Topics
- Write
an essay arguing that the Rev. Mr. Hooper
committed a grave offense that involved the
deceased girl in some way. Support your thesis
with quotations from the story and with library
and Internet research.
- Are
there similarities between the Rev. Mr. Hooper and
the title character of another Hawthorne story, "Young Goodman Brown"?
- What
does Mr. Hooper mean at the end of the story when
he says that everyone around him is wearing a
veil?
- As a
class exercise, answer this question yes or no on
an unsigned sheet of paper. Do you have dark
secrets that you would not disclose even to family
members? Then discuss whether Mr. Hooper was right
or wrong when he said that many people where a
black veil. After the discussion, tally the
answers.
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