Nathaniel Hawthorne took the name Aminadab (spelled with one "m") for the servant of the scientist Aylmer in his short story, "
The Birthmark." In Hawthorne's story, Aminadab is depicted as physical, "uncouth" (literally, unknowing) and even animalistic in contrast to Aylmer. "He seemed to represent man's physical nature; while Aylmer's slender figure, and pale, intellectual face, were no less apt a type of the spiritual element." Paradoxically, perhaps, this animalistic minor character is also the voice of conscience, who, unlike his egotistical boss, is able to appreciate the birthmark that Aylmer wants to remove from his wife's face even at the cost of her life. In the 1956 film
The Ten Commandments, Amminadab is portrayed by
H.B. Warner. During the Exodus, he is too old and frail to travel, so
Bithiah takes his fig tree seedling and assures him that it will be planted in the
Promised Land. ==References==