Hawthorne's resolution to his story leaves the protagonist defeated because while Mr. Hooper has won his conflict in the sense that no longer does anyone ask him to lift his veil, still "the gentle and timid would turn aside to avoid him.” Also, he is left isolated from human friendship and love as he lives behind the veil in "an ambiguity of sin or sorrow" which surrounds him. In fact, the Reverend Hooper remains in "that saddest of all prisons, his own heart." Ironically, then, in his effort to get others to look into their hearts and see their secret sins, the minister dies imprisoned by a heart that has lost all its joy. For this reason, he is buried with his veil yet on his face.