Essay On The Birthmark

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In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Birth-Mark, Aylmer, one of the greatest scientific minds of his time sets out to find a way to remove the birthmark from his wife Georgiana’s cheek. This process leads to massive amounts of emotional stress and grief on both people, and ultimately leads to Georgiana’s death. Aylmer’s inability to look past the small imperfection of his loving and faithful wife is his greatest flaw, and because he is unable to embrace the natural beauty of things, he responds by bending nature to his will and killing his love. Through the piece Hawthorn gives a clear message about the dangers of tampering with nature, the value of imperfection in life, and that a man with intellect but without morality to guide his actions can commit …show more content…

Her only perceptible flaw is the birthmark on her cheek, a small, hand-shaped, crimson mark, though for many men it is not only an addition, but an essential part of her beauty, noting that “many a desperate swain would have risked life for the privilege of pressing his lips to the mysterious hand,”(340). Not only does Aylmer find himself in the minority of disliking the birthmark, but he counters his assistant, Aminadab, who, if he were married to Georgiana, would “‘never part with that birth-mark,’”(343). The two characters contrast each other greatly, Aminadab being described as having “an indescribable earthiness that incrusted him,”(343), while Aylmer represents more of a scientific, intellectual archetype. This comparison gives us a clear defining statement that places Aylmer outside the natural realm of things, in how he acts and thinks, while the more natural, earthy characters like Aminadab and the other men who courted Georgiana love the birthmark and the wabi-sabi aesthetic that the birthmark represents. Aylmer’s distaste of the imperfect will only lead to pain for him and Georgiana and great loss for them

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