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Symbolism In The Birthmark

Decent Essays

The concept of beauty is a matter of opinion, namely, opinions imposed upon us at fairly early ages by society through those around us and through what the media feeds us. Societal beauty standards are unnaturally high and nearly unattainable— one must be tall, thin but curvy, light-skinned, acne-free, have symmetrical facial features, and overall conventionally attractive. Because of these standards, some may reject relationships with others if they don't find them attractive. In the short story “The Birthmark” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, a man begins rejecting his own wife because he finds a birthmark on her face repulsive. He rejects her to the point of her willing to do anything to rid herself of it, even if it means bringing about her own …show more content…

The birthmark may represent a variety of things, as the narrator states that Aylmer views the birthmark as a reference to Georgiana’s “liability to sin, sorrow, decay, and death” (Par. 8). Aylmer is deathly afraid of the birthmark and what he feels it means, so much so that he even has a nightmare about it that foreshadows Georgiana’s later death. After Georgiana confronts Aylmer about his nightmare about her birthmark, she decides that she must allow Aylmer to do whatever it costs to rid her of the birthmark so she won’t feel tortured by his disgusted gaze. Georgiana herself even foreshadows her own death when she says that they both don’t know “the cost...to rid [her of the] fatal birthmark” and that the “stain [of the birthmark] goes as deep as life itself” (Par. 16). When Georgiana finally drinks the potion that Aylmer concocts to rid her of the birthmark, the birthmark slowly begins to fade away in the same way that a “rainbow [fades] out of the sky” (Par. 84). Aylmer begins celebrating because he thinks his experiment was a success, however, Georgiana realizes her life is fading with the birthmark. With her dying breath, Georgiana tells Aylmer that he “rejected the best the earth could offer”, meaning herself (Par. 92). Georgiana’s death represents the idea that perfection is a concept that does not exist on earth— the birthmark is described as being the “fatal flaw of humanity which nature… stamps ineffaceably on all her productions” and that it was the only thing which kept “an angelic spirit… in union with a mortal frame” (Par. 8 & 93).Through her death, Hawthorne communicates to readers that striving for perfection is foolish as nothing truly perfect exists on

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