Read Next
Rappaccini’s Daughter
short story by Hawthorne
Rappaccini’s Daughter, allegorical short story by Nathaniel Hawthorne, first published in United States Magazine and Democratic Review (December 1844) and collected in Mosses from an Old Manse (1846).
Rappaccini, a scholar-scientist in Padua, grows only poisonous plants in his lush garden. His lovely daughter, Beatrice, has been nurtured on poison and is sustained by her father’s toxic plants. Giovanni, a student who lives next door to Rappaccini, falls in love with Beatrice and becomes contaminated by the garden’s poisonous aura. The antidote he is given cures him; when he gives it to Beatrice, however, she drinks it and dies.