登陆注册
14324300000067

第67章

Consul Bernick, at the very height of his social and financial career, the benefactor of his town and the strongest pillar of the community, has reached the summit through the channel of lies, deception, and fraud. He has robbed his bosom friend, Johann, of his good name, and has betrayed Lona Hessel, the woman he loved, to marry her step-sister for the sake of her money. He has enriched himself by shady transactions, under cover of "the community's good," and finally even goes to the extent of endangering human life by preparing the INDIAN GIRL, a rotten and dangerous vessel, to go to sea.

But the return of Lona brings him the realization of the emptiness and meanness of his narrow life. He seeks to placate the waking conscience by the hope that he has cleared the ground for the better life of his son, of the new generation. But even this last hope soon falls to the ground, as he realizes that truth cannot be built on a lie. At the very moment when the whole town is prepared to celebrate the great benefactor of the community with banquet praise, he himself, now grown to full spiritual manhood, confesses to the assembled townspeople:

"I have no right to this homage--. . .My fellow-citizens must know me to the core. Then let everyone examine himself, and let us realize the prediction that from this event we begin a new time. The old, with its tinsel, its hypocrisy, its hollowness, its lying propriety, and its pitiful cowardice, shall lie behind us like a museum, open for instruction."With A DOLL'S HOUSE Ibsen has paved the way for woman's emancipation.

Nora awakens from her doll's role to the realization of the injustice done her by her father and her husband, Helmer Torvald.

"While I was at home with father, he used to tell me all his opinions, and I held the same opinions. If I had others I concealed them, because he would not have approved. He used to call me his doll child, and play with me as I played with my dolls. Then I came to live in your house. You settled everything according to your taste, and I got the same taste as you, or I pretended to. When Ilook back on it now, I seem to have been living like a beggar, from hand to mouth. I lived by performing tricks for you, Torvald, but you would have it so. You and father have done me a great wrong."In vain Helmer uses the old philistine arguments of wifely duty and social obligations. Nora has grown out of her doll's dress into full stature of conscious womanhood. She is determined to think and judge for herself. She has realized that, before all else, she is a human being, owing the first duty to herself. She is undaunted even by the possibility of social ostracism. She has become sceptical of the justice of the law, the wisdom of the constituted. Her rebelling soul rises in protest against the existing. In her own words: "Imust make up my mind which is right, society or I."In her childlike faith in her husband she had hoped for the great miracle. But it was not the disappointed hope that opened her vision to the falsehoods of marriage. It was rather the smug contentment of Helmer with a safe lie--one that would remain hidden and not endanger his social standing.

When Nora closed behind her the door of her gilded cage and went out into the world a new, regenerated personality, she opened the gate of freedom and truth for her own sex and the race to come.

More than any other play, GHOSTS has acted like a bomb explosion, shaking the social structure to its very foundations.

In DOLL'S HOUSE the justification of the union between Nora and Helmer rested at least on the husband's conception of integrity and rigid adherence to our social morality. Indeed, he was the conventional ideal husband and devoted father. Not so in GHOSTS.

Mrs. Alving married Captain Alving only to find that he was a physical and mental wreck, and that life with him would mean utter degradation and be fatal to possible offspring. In her despair she turned to her youth's companion, young Pastor Manders who, as the true savior of souls for heaven, must needs be indifferent to earthly necessities. He sent her back to shame and degradation,--to her duties to husband and home. Indeed, happiness--to him--was but the unholy manifestation of a rebellious spirit, and a wife's duty was not to judge, but "to bear with humility the cross which a higher power had for your own good laid upon you."Mrs. Alving bore the cross for twenty-six long years. Not for the sake of the higher power, but for her little son Oswald, whom she longed to save from the poisonous atmosphere of her husband's home.

It was also for the sake of the beloved son that she supported the lie of his father's goodness, in superstitious awe of "duty and decency." She learned, alas! too late, that the sacrifice of her entire life had been in vain, and that her son Oswald was visited by the sins of his father, that he was irrevocably doomed. This, too, she learned, that "we are all of us ghosts. It is not only what we have inherited from our father and mother that walks in us. It is all sorts of dead ideas and lifeless old beliefs. They have no vitality, but they cling to us all the same and we can't get rid of them. . . . And then we are, one and all, so pitifully afraid of light. When you forced me under the yoke you called Duty and Obligation; when you praised as right and proper what my whole soul rebelled against as something loathsome; it was then that I began to look into the seams of your doctrine. I only wished to pick at a single knot, but when I had got that undone, the whole thing ravelled out. And then I understood that it was all machine-sewn."How could a society machine-sewn, fathom the seething depths whence issued the great masterpiece of Henrik Ibsen? It could not understand, and therefore it poured the vials of abuse and venom upon its greatest benefactor. That Ibsen was not daunted he has proved by his reply in AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE.

同类推荐
  • 峡中行

    峡中行

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 台湾文献丛刊清圣祖实录选辑

    台湾文献丛刊清圣祖实录选辑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 从公录

    从公录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 华严原人论合解

    华严原人论合解

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 识鉴

    识鉴

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 不大药师

    不大药师

    小药师,随大流,商场职场不自由。赴清波,泛扁舟,鲜花美酒立潮头。“感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持”欢迎加入“文道”群155625011
  • 婆罗岸全传

    婆罗岸全传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 男儿走尽天涯路

    男儿走尽天涯路

    四个同年同月同日生的少年。在十一岁那年遵循命运的旨意到了同一个地方。命运开始于漫不经心间展示它翻云覆雨的魔力。当男儿走尽了天涯路,当蓦然回首,他们得到了什么,失去了什么,他们还想抓住什么,还要放弃什么……
  • 超能特训营

    超能特训营

    由上古四大家族世代守护的圣兽镜在20年前突然不知去向,紧接着带来的却是整个家族的灭亡。叶扬只是一个普普通通的大学生,可是命运的安排让他解开了玄密的身世。是复仇,还是守护那得来不易的家园...超能特训营训练出来的是怪物,还是守护神...
  • 诚实守信(中华美德)

    诚实守信(中华美德)

    “中华美德”从传统文化的角度,对美德和人格修养的各个方面作出了形象生动的阐释。《诚实守信》为“中华美德”之一,以通俗易懂的古典故事对“诚实守信”这一品德作出了形象生动的阐释。而青少年时期是品德形成的重要时期,对于以后的道德观的树立有着极大的影响,因此,从青少年时期就要给他们正确的引导,使之逐渐形成正确的道德认识、道德情感、道德行为和道德意志,做诚实守信的青年人。
  • 阴阳动天

    阴阳动天

    出身高贵,天资聪颖,却险成废人,在经历了人生的变故后,逆乱阴阳,重定乾坤!
  • 你就是我的风景

    你就是我的风景

    情不知所起,一往而深。世界上最好的感情就是,当我发现我爱上你之后,你告诉我,你也喜欢我。这就是所谓宿命么?第一眼见你就觉得你与众不同,在你不知道我的时候,我就对你动心了。温暖系宠文,纯纯的校园爱恋。
  • 荼蘼开至君归处

    荼蘼开至君归处

    喧闹街市,静谧古楼,袅袅熏香,一座落尘居,一本《拂尘录》。你有求而不得的东西吗?你甘心永远以你现在的面目生活吗?你想要修改命运吗?我可以帮助你,但是……如果结局并不太圆满,可与我无关呢……
  • 逆生途

    逆生途

    姜岚想做自己要做的事,陈青墨做自己要做的事。拦不住他们。姜岚可以选择忍耐,但孟邢逸绝不会妥协,更不会屈服。姜岚,陈青墨,孟邢逸,三人共行,逆生之途,泫然开启。
  • 卡纳尔骑士

    卡纳尔骑士

    有一帮热血的青年,为了自己的梦想,挥洒热血,创立帝国,勇斗邪恶。