Sacrifice In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Birthmark

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Science or a lover, a partner in life and someone to grow old with? Or how about, using science to kill your lover, the partner that’s suppose to live with you until your gray hairs start showing? For Aylmer, the answer was crystal clear. His love for science is what propelled him to push the scientific boundaries too far. Surprisingly, Aylmer shows no resistance when his wife is his object of experimentation. He is also quick to judge at the mention of her beauty. Georgiana is born with a deeply interwoven birthmark on her left cheek resembling a human hand. Her admirers say it is a token of the magic left from a fairy at her birth hour. (para. Hawthorne 1). As Georgiana ponders over the presence of her birthmark, she slowly starts to convince herself that the crimson hand on her left cheek is none other than her fatal flaw due to her own husband's opinion. She does not just acquiesce with the removal of it, but she proposes it despite the risk of losing her life. Aylmer seems rather happy that she has made this choice and quickly proceeds to experiment with her. In the story “The Birthmark”, it says “The next day… a plan … for the intense thought and constant …show more content…

At this time, “The natural world is dark, decaying, and mysterious...it’s revelations are evil and hellish” stated in the New World Encyclopedia. Aylmer is candid and frank about his view towards nature. He does not just see a flaw in Georgiana’s face but nature's work. The story says “I shall have corrected what Nature left imperfect in her fairest work!” (Hawthorne 3). Characteristics of this time period include “less confident about the notion perfection is an innate quality of mankind”(Dark). Aylmer believes that Nature plays a role in the presence of his wife's fatal flaw. As an experienced scientist, he feels it is his responsibility to remove and correct Nature's

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