Nature In Rappaccini's Daughter

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Moderately Pleasing Shakespeare once said, "[Nature,] I like this place and could willingly waste my time in it" ("Quotes About Nature."). Nathaniel Hawthorne also finds nature an exhilarating place, being a romanticist Hawthorne fantasizes about the past and present, nature, and many more ideas. Hawthorne, a romanticist, focuses on the awe of nature; celebration of the individual; and strong senses, feeling, and emotions. A common characteristic of romanticist writing is the awe of nature or a profound love of nature; Hawthorne uses nature to an extreme in his short story "Rappaccini's Daughter". Rappaccini "the famous Doctor" has a garden of unimaginable plants that attracts the attention of Giovanni (Rappaccini). Hawthorne capitalizes

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