A Doll's House Foreshadowing Analysis

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“A Doll’s House” written by Hernik Ibsen is a dramatic screen write full of foreshadowing and conflict. Nora, the wife of Torvald Helmer, has committed a taboo act of her time. She kept her secret to herself for many years until revealing it to a long lost friend Mrs. Linde. During this era, everything a woman did was a reflection upon her husband, good or bad. Nora, in the panic to save her husband from bad health, obtained a loan from Mr. Nils Krogstad by means of forgery. Nils worked for the bank and was known for his scandalous loan making schemes. Nils worked for the bank in which Nora’s husband had just taken the lead position in. Nora knew her secret would come to light, but tried all she could to continue to keep it her secret. Nils knew that his title with the …show more content…

Torvald was enraged, not at the fact that Nora obtained the loan, but at the fact that their home was filled with secret and lies. Torvald belittled Nora and discredited her ability to be a good mother to their children. The second envelope that Torvald opened was the bond for the loan in which Nora obtained. When Torvald realized that his reputation had been saved, he recanted all of his mean statements and tried to mend the damage he had caused. At this point, it was too late for Nora. Although she was upset with his words, she was more upset at the fact that she did not really know her husband, or herself for that matter. It was this enlightenment that Nora decided that it would be in the best interest of all involved for her to leave and try to find herself to be a better woman, mother, and potentially wife in the end. Torvald begged her to stay, but she couldn’t do it any longer. As she explained to Torvald, “Ah Torvald, the most wonderful thing of all would have to happen [for me to stay].”

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