preview

Romanticism In The Birthmark

Decent Essays

The Unexpected Romanticism of Aylmer
Romantics see nature as utterly perfect, but, upon closer inspection, everything in the world has some tiny flaw that makes the subject no less beautiful than if it were without; true romantics accept these flaws and consider them perfection. There is no such thing as the perfect specimen because of microscopic anomalies naked to the human eye. In “The Birthmark,” a romantic short story by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the main character, a scientist named Aylmer, marries the most beautiful woman the world has to offer, but feels that her flaw makes her imperfect and ugly instead of more beautiful. While his removal of the birthmark is an act of science that opposes the views of romantics everywhere, his motives of doing such are truly romantic. While these two opposing characteristics seem too contradictory to work in harmony, Hawthorne manages to wrap them both up into one main character. Hawthorne’s romantic story features two main characters that oppose social norms: Aylmer the scientist and his beautiful wife, Georgiana. Aylmer opposes the typical reactions to the birthmark after he marries Georgiana. The typical reaction of “masculine observers, if the birthmark did not heighten their admiration, contented themselves with wishing it away,” while Aylmer is not satisfied with merely a wish, but is confident that he could take action on the subject (Hawthorne 2). Surprisingly enough, this equates a scientist to having romantic values,

Get Access