The Birthmark Character Analysis

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In the short story, “The Birth-Mark” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, we get to experience the lengths of which someone will go to achieve perfection. But, in the case of this story, this perfection is not a goal for themselves but in someone else. Aylmer is a highly respected man that has delved into many regions of science and his wife, Georgiana, would be considered a classically ideal woman except for one thing, the birth-mark that stains her left cheek. Aylmer’s obsession with his wife’s perfection leads the couple down a very dangerous path intermingling loving devotion and the misuse of science for one’s selfish desires. Aylmer is a man obsessed with science, plain and simple. For some short time when he wasn’t cooped up in his laboratory, he …show more content…

She is the wife of a science-obsessed man, she is alone and placed second to his first love. That alone is a dangerous situation. I believe that she might be internally fighting for first place once she realizes that the only thing that will please him is removing the birthmark from her cheek. She is almost immediately aware of the potential consequence of removing the birthmark, “"Aylmer," resumed Georgiana, solemnly, "I know not what may be the cost to both of us to rid me of this fatal birthmark. Perhaps its removal may cause cureless deformity; or it may be the stain goes as deep as life itself.”” (Hawthorne 215). Aylmer tries to reassure her that he has thought this through many times and that nothing bad would happen. I am not sure if she quite trusts him as much as she wants to please him and hear him stop speaking of her birthmark in such a negative way. Georgiana becomes repulsed of herself due to her husband 's incessant need to perfect what has no fatal …show more content…

Aylmer has never perfected his experiments just like he’ll never perfect her face like he invisions. Every single attempt he has made has had some flaw, he has not yet acquired the skill to skew nature in his own mind’s direction. And yet, I believe he is aware of this but the thrill of science keeps drawing him in to experiment more and more. His accomplishments may be falling from perfect but each one of them takes something away from the subject. This man is willing to take his wife’s life, though he may be in denial about his own failures, in order to see an unmarked face. His need takes the soul out of Georgiana, a once lively and confident

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