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The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne Essay

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The Birthmark by Nathaniel Hawthorne In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story The Birthmark, the narrator introduces us to Aylmer, a brilliant scientist who spent his life studying nature extensively to the detriment of his own personal life. His wife, Georgiana, has been marked with a small, red birthmark on her cheek that most men found attractive all her life. Aylmer only sees this birthmark as a flaw and his desire for perfection can only result in death for Georgiana because becoming an ideal, perfect being means she cannot exist in this world. He decides he is going to remove the birthmark to make his wife perfect, without knowing that by doing so he kills her. Aylmer sees Georgiana’s birthmark as a symbol of human imperfection, …show more content…

The moral behind this story is that no human can live as a perfect being, since we are naturally imperfect. In the article written by Lynn Shakinovsky, “The Return Of The Repressed,” she states that the birthmark is a metaphor for Georgiana’s identity, her sexuality, and her being. Consequently, Aylmer does not realize that in removing the mark, he removes all there is of his wife. The narrator warns us by implying that the mark is "deeply interwoven with the texture and substance of her face" (37). Aylmer’s assistant, Aminadab, even comments that "if she were his wife, he would never part with that birthmark" (43), and even Georgiana herself says, "the stain goes as deep as life itself" (41). We are repeatedly warned that the birthmark has a significant importance and that it embodies more than just a physical imperfect. The motif even surfaces in Aylmer's dream: “the deeper went the knife, the deeper sank the hand, until at length its tiny grasp appeared to have caught hold of Georgiana's heart.” (40). Shakinovsky further analyzes the reasons for Aylmer meddling with science and nature. She states that, “For Aylmer, the mark supposedly represents Georgiana's connection to earthliness, her lack of heavenly perfection, and is therefore unacceptable. The narrator shifts this view only slightly. Like Aylmer, he regards the mark as a blemish; he simply sees it as a blemish, which implies her true perfection. He cannot grasp

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