In "The Birthmark", Hawthorne uses Aylmer's perfectionism in order to underscore how deadly the ideal image of being perfect is. Aylmer is obsessed with Georgiana's one flaw, her birthmark. Although he sees the birthmark as a flaw, Georgiana does not agree. Aylmer does anything and everything he can to find a "cure" for her flaw. In the end, the birthmark turns out to be a fatal flaw. With Aylmer trying to remove it, Georgiana wishes she was dead, rather then have her birthmark. Aylmer's perfectionism…
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