Minister's Black Veil

654 Words2 Pages

I chose to write an analysis of the story called The Minister's Black Veil by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The story began in Britain in the mid-eighteenth century and became popular in the 1790's. The Minister's Black Veil first published in 1837, and everyone looked at the story as an American Gothic Genre. By the early of the nineteenth century, this genre had fallen out of favor with the Britain’s, so Hawthorne rewrote the story adding his own ideas and representing America's macabre history. The story The Minister's Black Veil is about a secret sin. Mr. Hooper was over the congregation of a Puritan town. All the people that went to church was scared to see the Mr. Hooper always wore a semi-transparent black veil over the majority of his face …show more content…

As Mr. Hooper took pulpit, he did a sermon on secret sin and tinged, rather darker than usual with a gloom of Mr. Hooper's temperament. Questions and concerns started to arise in the congregation, who became scared of their own secret sins and the appearance of their new minister. Right after the sermon about secret sin, there was a funeral for a young lady who had passed away there in town, and Mr. Hooper attended the funeral. it was mentioned that if the veil were to blow away that Mr. Hooper would be "fearful of her glance" talking about the young lady that passed away. Mr. Hooper then prayed a couple of times, and the body was carried away. Two of the people that were mourners there at the ceremony said that they had a fancy that " the Mr. Hooper and the young ladies spirit were walking hand in hand". Later on that same night there was another occasion happened that same night, and it was a wedding ceremony. The wedding ceremony was supposed to be the best night, but when Mr. Hooper showed up wearing that semi-transparent veil, it turned the wedding upside down to a cloud of gloom. By now not only are the adults gossiping about their new minister and his veil but so are the children of the town.

Open Document