<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
		>
<channel>
	<title>Comments on: What Are Some Good Quotes From The Play/story A Doll&#8217;s House By Ibsen?</title>
	<atom:link href="http://clairesdollhouse.com/emporium/what-are-some-good-quotes-from-the-playstory-a-dolls-house-by-ibsen/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://clairesdollhouse.com/emporium/what-are-some-good-quotes-from-the-playstory-a-dolls-house-by-ibsen/</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 22 May 2012 03:20:45 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.4</generator>
<xhtml:meta xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" name="robots" content="noindex" />
	<item>
		<title>By: miamiwin</title>
		<link>http://clairesdollhouse.com/emporium/what-are-some-good-quotes-from-the-playstory-a-dolls-house-by-ibsen/comment-page-1/#comment-2173</link>
		<dc:creator>miamiwin</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 14 Nov 2009 21:45:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://clairesdollhouse.com/emporium/what-are-some-good-quotes-from-the-playstory-a-dolls-house-by-ibsen/#comment-2173</guid>
		<description>There can be no freedom or beauty about a home life that depends on borrowing and debt.
It&#039;s a sweet little bird, but it gets through a terrible amount of money. You wouldn&#039;t believe how much it costs a man when he&#039;s got a little song-bird like you!
What&#039;s to become of the morally sound? Left out in the cold, I suppose. We must heal the sick.
Yes -- some day, perhaps, after many years, when I am no longer as pretty as I am now. Don&#039;t laugh at me! I mean, of course, when Torvald is no longer as devoted to me as he is now; when my dancing and dressing-up and reciting have palled on him then it may be a good thing to have something in reserve.
Your squirrel would run about and do all her tricks if you would be nice, and do as she wants.
Many a man can save himself if he admits he&#039;s done wrong and takes his punishment.
Hasn&#039;t a daughter the right to protect her dying father from worry and anxiety? Hasn&#039;t a wife the right to save her husband&#039;s life? I don&#039;t know much about the law, but I&#039;m quite certain that it must say somewhere that things like that are allowed.
An atmosphere of lies like that infects and poisons the whole life of a home. In a house like that, every breath that the children take is filled with the germs of evil.
It is no use lying to one&#039;s self.
You don&#039;t get nothing for nothing in this life.
When you&#039;ve sold yourself once for the sake of others, you don&#039;t do it a second time.
The black, cold, icy water. Down and down, without end -- if it would only end.
From this moment happiness is not the question; all that concerns us is to save the remains, the fragments, the appearance.
I have existed merely to perform tricks for you, Torvald. But you wanted it like that. You and father have committed a great sin against me. It is your fault that I have made nothing of my life. Our home has been nothing but a playroom. I have been your doll-wife, just as at home I was papa&#039;s doll-child; and here the children have been my dolls. I thought it great fun when you played with me, just as they thought it great fun when I played with them. That is what our marriage has been, Torvald.
If I&#039;m ever to reach any understanding of myself and the things around me, I must learn to stand alone. That&#039;s why I can&#039;t stay here with you any longer.
I have another duty equally sacred ... my duty to myself.
You don&#039;t talk or think like the man I could bind myself to. When your first panic was over -- not about what threatened me, but about what might happen to you -- and when there was no more danger, then, as far as you were concerned, it was just as if nothing had happened at all. I was simply your little songbird, your doll, and from now on you would handle it more gently than ever because it was so delicate and fragile. At that moment, Torvald, I realized that for eight years I&#039;d been living her with a strange man and that I&#039;d borne him three children. Oh, I can&#039;t bear to think of it -- I could tear myself to little pieces!
More Henrik Ibsen Quoteshttp://www.literary-quotations.com/d/dol…
Quotes
Quote 1: &quot;Nora, Nora! Just like a woman! But seriously, Nora, you know what I think about that sort of thing. No debts, no borrowing. There&#039;s something constrained, something ugly even, about a home that&#039;s founded on borrowing and debt.&quot; Act 1, pg. 149
Quote 2: &quot;It&#039;s a sweet little bird, but it gets through a terrible amount of money. You wouldn&#039;t believe how much it costs a man when he&#039;s got a little song-bird like you!&quot; Act 1, pg. 151
Quote 3: &quot;Torvald has his pride - most men have - he&#039;d be terribly hurt and humiliated if he thought he&#039;d owed anything to me. It&#039;d spoil everything between us, and our lovely happy home would never be the same again.&quot; Act 1, pg. 161
Quote 4: &quot;Still it was tremendous fun sitting there working and earning money. It was almost like being a man.&quot; Act 1, pg. 162
Quote 5: &quot;Hasn&#039;t a daughter the right to protect her dying father from worry and anxiety? Hasn&#039;t a wife the right to save her husband&#039;s life? I don&#039;t know much about the law, but I&#039;m quite certain that it must say somewhere that things like that are allowed.&quot; Act 1, pg. 175-176
Quote 6: &quot;Because an atmosphere of lies like that infects and poisons the whole life of a home. In a house like that, every breath that the children take is filled with the germs of evil.&quot; Act 1, pg. 179
Quote 7: &quot;Look, Nora, in lots of things, you&#039;re still a child. I&#039;m older than you in many ways and I&#039;ve had a little more experience.&quot; Act 2, pg. 184
Quote 8: &quot;&#039;If your squirrel were to ask you very prettily for something...&#039;
&#039;Your squirrel will scamper about and do all her tricks, if you&#039;ll be nice and do what she asks...&#039;
&#039;Your skylark&#039;ll sing all over the house - up and down the scale...&#039;
&#039;I&#039;ll be a fairy and dance on a moonbeam for you...&#039;&quot; Act 2, pg. 187
Quote 9: &quot;Are you happy now? There - there - there - don&#039;t look like a frightened little dove - the whole thing&#039;s just sheer imagination. Now, you must rehearse your tarantella - with the tambourine. I&#039;ll go sit in the inner room and shut the doors, so you can make all the noise you like - I shan&#039;t hear a thing.&quot; Act 2, pg. 190
Quote 10: &quot;I promised myself that I&#039;d tell you before I went away, and I could never have a better opportunity. Well, Nora, now you know. And you know, too, that you can trust me - more than anyone else.&quot; Act 2, pg. 194
Quote 11: &quot;Yes, now you&#039;ve been warned, so don&#039;t do anything stupid. I shall expect to hear from Helmer as soon as he gets my letter. And remember, it&#039;s your husband who&#039;s forced me to do this sort of thing again. I shall never forgive him for that.&quot; Act 2, pg. 200
Quote 12: &quot;Nora, darling, you&#039;re dancing as if your life depended on it!&quot; Act 2, pg. 204
Quote 13: &quot;When I lost you, it was just as if the very ground had given way under my feet. Look at me now - a shipwrecked man clinging to a spar.&quot; Act 3, pg. 208
Quote 14: &quot;Nils, when you&#039;ve sold yourself once for the sake of others, you don&#039;t do it a second time.&quot; Act 3, pg. 210
Quote 15: &quot;But now a whole day&#039;s gone by and I&#039;ve witnessed things in this house that I could hardly believe. Helmer must know the whole story. This wretched secret must be brought into the open so that there&#039;s complete understanding between them. That&#039;s be impossible while there&#039;s so much concealment and subterfuge.&quot; Act 3, pg. 211
Quote 16: &quot;&#039;Mayn&#039;t I look at my dearest treasure? At all the beauty that belongs to no one but me - that&#039;s all my very own?&#039;...
&#039;I&#039;ll tell you something: when I&#039;m out with you at a party, do you know why I hardly talk to you - don&#039;t come near you - only steal a glance at you every now and then...do you know why? It&#039;s because I pretend that we&#039;re secretly in love - engaged in secret - and that no one dreams that there&#039;s anything between us.&#039;&quot; Act 3, pg. 215
Quote 17: &quot;Nora, now that you and I have no one but each other. Oh, my darling, I feel as if I can&#039;t hold you close enough. You know, Nora, I&#039;ve often wished that you could be threatened by some imminent danger so that I could risk everything I had - even my own life itself - to save you.&quot; Act 3, pg. 219
Quote 18: &quot;What a terrible awakening! For these last eight years you&#039;ve been my joy and my pride - and now I find that you&#039;re a liar, a hypocrite - even worse - a criminal! Oh, the unspeakable ugliness of it all! Ugh! I might have known that something of this sort would happen - I should have forseen it. All your father&#039;s shiftless character - Be Quiet! - All your father&#039;s shiftless character has come out in you. No religion, no morality, no sense of duty...So this is what I get for condoning his fault! I did it for your sake, and this is how you repay me! Act 3, pg. 220-221
Quote 19: &quot;How you must have suffered - seeing no way out except...No, we&#039;ll put all those hateful things out of our minds. Now we can shout for joy, again and again: &#039;It&#039;s all over - it&#039;s all over! Listen, Nora - you don&#039;t seem to realize - it&#039;s all over. What&#039;s the matter? Such a grim face? Poor little Nora, I see what it is: you simply can&#039;t believe that I&#039;ve forgiven you. But, I have, Nora, I swear it - I&#039;ve forgiven you everything. I know now that what you did was all for love of me. Act 3, pg. 223 
Quote 20: &quot;But you don&#039;t talk or think like the man I could bind myself to. When your first panic was over - not about what threatened me, but about what might happen to you - and when there was no more danger, then, as far as you were concerned, it was just as if nothing had happened at all. I was simply your little songbird, your doll, and from now on you would handle it more gently than ever because it was so delicate and fragile. [Rising] At that moment, Torvald, I realized that for eight years I&#039;d been living her with a strange man and that I&#039;d borne him three children. Oh, I can&#039;t bear to think of it - I could tear myself to little pieces!&quot; Act 3, pg. 230http://www.bookrags.com/notes/dh/QUO.htm</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There can be no freedom or beauty about a home life that depends on borrowing and debt.<br />
It&#8217;s a sweet little bird, but it gets through a terrible amount of money. You wouldn&#8217;t believe how much it costs a man when he&#8217;s got a little song-bird like you!<br />
What&#8217;s to become of the morally sound? Left out in the cold, I suppose. We must heal the sick.<br />
Yes &#8212; some day, perhaps, after many years, when I am no longer as pretty as I am now. Don&#8217;t laugh at me! I mean, of course, when Torvald is no longer as devoted to me as he is now; when my dancing and dressing-up and reciting have palled on him then it may be a good thing to have something in reserve.<br />
Your squirrel would run about and do all her tricks if you would be nice, and do as she wants.<br />
Many a man can save himself if he admits he&#8217;s done wrong and takes his punishment.<br />
Hasn&#8217;t a daughter the right to protect her dying father from worry and anxiety? Hasn&#8217;t a wife the right to save her husband&#8217;s life? I don&#8217;t know much about the law, but I&#8217;m quite certain that it must say somewhere that things like that are allowed.<br />
An atmosphere of lies like that infects and poisons the whole life of a home. In a house like that, every breath that the children take is filled with the germs of evil.<br />
It is no use lying to one&#8217;s self.<br />
You don&#8217;t get nothing for nothing in this life.<br />
When you&#8217;ve sold yourself once for the sake of others, you don&#8217;t do it a second time.<br />
The black, cold, icy water. Down and down, without end &#8212; if it would only end.<br />
From this moment happiness is not the question; all that concerns us is to save the remains, the fragments, the appearance.<br />
I have existed merely to perform tricks for you, Torvald. But you wanted it like that. You and father have committed a great sin against me. It is your fault that I have made nothing of my life. Our home has been nothing but a playroom. I have been your doll-wife, just as at home I was papa&#8217;s doll-child; and here the children have been my dolls. I thought it great fun when you played with me, just as they thought it great fun when I played with them. That is what our marriage has been, Torvald.<br />
If I&#8217;m ever to reach any understanding of myself and the things around me, I must learn to stand alone. That&#8217;s why I can&#8217;t stay here with you any longer.<br />
I have another duty equally sacred &#8230; my duty to myself.<br />
You don&#8217;t talk or think like the man I could bind myself to. When your first panic was over &#8212; not about what threatened me, but about what might happen to you &#8212; and when there was no more danger, then, as far as you were concerned, it was just as if nothing had happened at all. I was simply your little songbird, your doll, and from now on you would handle it more gently than ever because it was so delicate and fragile. At that moment, Torvald, I realized that for eight years I&#8217;d been living her with a strange man and that I&#8217;d borne him three children. Oh, I can&#8217;t bear to think of it &#8212; I could tear myself to little pieces!<br />
More Henrik Ibsen Quoteshttp://www.literary-quotations.com/d/dol…<br />
Quotes<br />
Quote 1: &#8220;Nora, Nora! Just like a woman! But seriously, Nora, you know what I think about that sort of thing. No debts, no borrowing. There&#8217;s something constrained, something ugly even, about a home that&#8217;s founded on borrowing and debt.&#8221; Act 1, pg. 149<br />
Quote 2: &#8220;It&#8217;s a sweet little bird, but it gets through a terrible amount of money. You wouldn&#8217;t believe how much it costs a man when he&#8217;s got a little song-bird like you!&#8221; Act 1, pg. 151<br />
Quote 3: &#8220;Torvald has his pride &#8211; most men have &#8211; he&#8217;d be terribly hurt and humiliated if he thought he&#8217;d owed anything to me. It&#8217;d spoil everything between us, and our lovely happy home would never be the same again.&#8221; Act 1, pg. 161<br />
Quote 4: &#8220;Still it was tremendous fun sitting there working and earning money. It was almost like being a man.&#8221; Act 1, pg. 162<br />
Quote 5: &#8220;Hasn&#8217;t a daughter the right to protect her dying father from worry and anxiety? Hasn&#8217;t a wife the right to save her husband&#8217;s life? I don&#8217;t know much about the law, but I&#8217;m quite certain that it must say somewhere that things like that are allowed.&#8221; Act 1, pg. 175-176<br />
Quote 6: &#8220;Because an atmosphere of lies like that infects and poisons the whole life of a home. In a house like that, every breath that the children take is filled with the germs of evil.&#8221; Act 1, pg. 179<br />
Quote 7: &#8220;Look, Nora, in lots of things, you&#8217;re still a child. I&#8217;m older than you in many ways and I&#8217;ve had a little more experience.&#8221; Act 2, pg. 184<br />
Quote 8: &#8220;&#8216;If your squirrel were to ask you very prettily for something&#8230;&#8217;<br />
&#8216;Your squirrel will scamper about and do all her tricks, if you&#8217;ll be nice and do what she asks&#8230;&#8217;<br />
&#8216;Your skylark&#8217;ll sing all over the house &#8211; up and down the scale&#8230;&#8217;<br />
&#8216;I&#8217;ll be a fairy and dance on a moonbeam for you&#8230;&#8217;&#8221; Act 2, pg. 187<br />
Quote 9: &#8220;Are you happy now? There &#8211; there &#8211; there &#8211; don&#8217;t look like a frightened little dove &#8211; the whole thing&#8217;s just sheer imagination. Now, you must rehearse your tarantella &#8211; with the tambourine. I&#8217;ll go sit in the inner room and shut the doors, so you can make all the noise you like &#8211; I shan&#8217;t hear a thing.&#8221; Act 2, pg. 190<br />
Quote 10: &#8220;I promised myself that I&#8217;d tell you before I went away, and I could never have a better opportunity. Well, Nora, now you know. And you know, too, that you can trust me &#8211; more than anyone else.&#8221; Act 2, pg. 194<br />
Quote 11: &#8220;Yes, now you&#8217;ve been warned, so don&#8217;t do anything stupid. I shall expect to hear from Helmer as soon as he gets my letter. And remember, it&#8217;s your husband who&#8217;s forced me to do this sort of thing again. I shall never forgive him for that.&#8221; Act 2, pg. 200<br />
Quote 12: &#8220;Nora, darling, you&#8217;re dancing as if your life depended on it!&#8221; Act 2, pg. 204<br />
Quote 13: &#8220;When I lost you, it was just as if the very ground had given way under my feet. Look at me now &#8211; a shipwrecked man clinging to a spar.&#8221; Act 3, pg. 208<br />
Quote 14: &#8220;Nils, when you&#8217;ve sold yourself once for the sake of others, you don&#8217;t do it a second time.&#8221; Act 3, pg. 210<br />
Quote 15: &#8220;But now a whole day&#8217;s gone by and I&#8217;ve witnessed things in this house that I could hardly believe. Helmer must know the whole story. This wretched secret must be brought into the open so that there&#8217;s complete understanding between them. That&#8217;s be impossible while there&#8217;s so much concealment and subterfuge.&#8221; Act 3, pg. 211<br />
Quote 16: &#8220;&#8216;Mayn&#8217;t I look at my dearest treasure? At all the beauty that belongs to no one but me &#8211; that&#8217;s all my very own?&#8217;&#8230;<br />
&#8216;I&#8217;ll tell you something: when I&#8217;m out with you at a party, do you know why I hardly talk to you &#8211; don&#8217;t come near you &#8211; only steal a glance at you every now and then&#8230;do you know why? It&#8217;s because I pretend that we&#8217;re secretly in love &#8211; engaged in secret &#8211; and that no one dreams that there&#8217;s anything between us.&#8217;&#8221; Act 3, pg. 215<br />
Quote 17: &#8220;Nora, now that you and I have no one but each other. Oh, my darling, I feel as if I can&#8217;t hold you close enough. You know, Nora, I&#8217;ve often wished that you could be threatened by some imminent danger so that I could risk everything I had &#8211; even my own life itself &#8211; to save you.&#8221; Act 3, pg. 219<br />
Quote 18: &#8220;What a terrible awakening! For these last eight years you&#8217;ve been my joy and my pride &#8211; and now I find that you&#8217;re a liar, a hypocrite &#8211; even worse &#8211; a criminal! Oh, the unspeakable ugliness of it all! Ugh! I might have known that something of this sort would happen &#8211; I should have forseen it. All your father&#8217;s shiftless character &#8211; Be Quiet! &#8211; All your father&#8217;s shiftless character has come out in you. No religion, no morality, no sense of duty&#8230;So this is what I get for condoning his fault! I did it for your sake, and this is how you repay me! Act 3, pg. 220-221<br />
Quote 19: &#8220;How you must have suffered &#8211; seeing no way out except&#8230;No, we&#8217;ll put all those hateful things out of our minds. Now we can shout for joy, again and again: &#8216;It&#8217;s all over &#8211; it&#8217;s all over! Listen, Nora &#8211; you don&#8217;t seem to realize &#8211; it&#8217;s all over. What&#8217;s the matter? Such a grim face? Poor little Nora, I see what it is: you simply can&#8217;t believe that I&#8217;ve forgiven you. But, I have, Nora, I swear it &#8211; I&#8217;ve forgiven you everything. I know now that what you did was all for love of me. Act 3, pg. 223<br />
Quote 20: &#8220;But you don&#8217;t talk or think like the man I could bind myself to. When your first panic was over &#8211; not about what threatened me, but about what might happen to you &#8211; and when there was no more danger, then, as far as you were concerned, it was just as if nothing had happened at all. I was simply your little songbird, your doll, and from now on you would handle it more gently than ever because it was so delicate and fragile. [Rising] At that moment, Torvald, I realized that for eight years I&#8217;d been living her with a strange man and that I&#8217;d borne him three children. Oh, I can&#8217;t bear to think of it &#8211; I could tear myself to little pieces!&#8221; Act 3, pg. 230http://www.bookrags.com/notes/dh/QUO.htm</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
</channel>
</rss>

