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Comparing Ligeia And The Birthmark

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For as long as humans have existed, so have the ever-changing standards of what is considered "beautiful". Throughout the ages, this subject has plagued the mind of many great thinkers such as Da Vinci, resulting in the creation of the golden ration. In "Ligeia" and "The Birthmark", authors Nathaniel Hawthorne and Edgar Allan Poe illustrate how an obsession with beauty can lead to a madness that dominates the mind. The story of "Ligeia" is that of a man who is so bewitched by his late wife's beauty that he imposes h. "The Birthmark" tells of a woman named Georgiana whose husband is so blinded by her only imperfection that he fails to see her beauty as a whole. In "Ligeia", the narrator has unclear memories of his initial encounter with his first wife. "I cannot, for my soul, remember how, when, or even precisely where, I first became acquainted with the lady Ligeia" (Poe 114). This seems to contradict the remainder of the story considering he cannot stop thinking about her. Ligeia's hold over him appears to be like that of a Siren in which she has inexplicably captivated and consumed his mind considering while not being conventionally attractive (Jones 34). "Yet her features were not of that …show more content…

His brooding nature and ill-explained hatred towards her makes her resent him. She is locked away in their gothic bridal chamber, left to wilt like the neglected flower she is. A debutant to the world outside her family's care, Rowena does not know how to deal with the suffering and angst caused by her husband's erratic behavior. Like his first wife, Rowena falls ill — most likely due to the aforementioned causes. Even through her vulnerable and sickly condition, her husband actively disregards her by sedating himself with drugs. Upon her premature death, the level of the narrator's infatuation with his Ligeia is revealed when he claims to see a visage of her in place of Rowena's deceased

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