The Veil Chapter Summary

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Speaker
The speaker is the author who tries to address the racial problem that exists in the late 1800s to 1900s. Though Du Bois sometimes utilizes the stories of other people to better explain the Veil, he is still the one who is narrating the information conveyed by the book.
The book is not solely written through the personal stories of the author. Instead, it’s composed of several important stories that vividly reflect the souls of African Americans. The theme of conflict resonates throughout Chapter 11. The author is experiencing an internal conflict in which his sorrow is followed by the sense of relief that is not reasonable to be experienced after the death of a child. Nevertheless, the conflict demonstrates the author’s pitiable and heart-rending sudden realization that the death of his son is actually more comforting than letting him live in a world where racial segregation is tearing apart the lives of many black people. Additionally, another significant personal growth can be seen in the first chapter as the author realizes(the double consciousness)that a Veil exists between the whites and the blacks even though they live together. Another personal growth is revealed in chapter 4 when the author is teaching in a rural area. Even though the author is more educated than most of the other African Americans, the treatment given by the self-proclaimed superior race leads the author to …show more content…

Better far this nameless void that stops my life than a sea of sorrow for you” (Du Bois 170). Living in such an era in which the promised freedom of emancipation is not heartily felt, the author, despite the sorrow deeply felt after his son’s death, grows to feel a sense of relief after contemplating about another side of his son’s death, which is freeing him from the “sea of sorrow” that's imposed on every black soul in that

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