A DOLL’S HOUSE
Henrik Ibsen
Plot Overview
A Doll’s House opens on Christmas Eve. Nora Helmer enters her
well-furnished living room—the setting of the entire play—carrying several
packages. Torvald Helmer, Nora’s husband, comes out of his study when he hears
her arrive. He greets her playfully and affectionately, but then chides her for
spending so much money on Christmas gifts. Their conversation reveals that the
Helmers have had to be careful with money for many years, but that Torvald has
recently obtained a new position at the bank where he works that will afford
them a more comfortable lifestyle.
Helene, the maid, announces that the Helmers’ dear friend Dr. Rank has
come to visit. At the same time, another visitor has arrived, this one unknown.
To Nora’s great surprise, Kristine Linde, a former school friend, comes into
the room. The two have not seen each other for years, but Nora mentions having
read that Mrs. Linde’s husband passed away a few years earlier. Mrs. Linde
tells Nora that when her husband died, she was left with no money and no
children. Nora tells Mrs. Linde about her first year of marriage to Torvald.
She explains that they were very poor and both had to work long hours. Torvald
became sick, she adds, and the couple had to travel to Italy so that Torvald
could recover.
Nora inquires further about Mrs. Linde’s life, and Mrs. Linde explains
that for years she had to care for her sick mother and her two younger
brothers. She states that her mother has passed away, though, and that the
brothers are too old to need her. Instead of feeling relief, Mrs. Linde says
she feels empty because she has no occupation; she hopes that Torvald may be
able to help her obtain employment. Nora promises to speak to Torvald and then
reveals a great secret to Mrs. Linde—without Torvald’s knowledge, Nora
illegally borrowed money for the trip that she and Torvald took to Italy; she
told Torvald that the money had come from her father. For years, Nora reveals,
she has worked and saved in secret, slowly repaying the debt, and soon it will
be fully repaid.
Krogstad, a low-level employee at the bank where Torvald works, arrives
and proceeds into Torvald’s study. Nora reacts uneasily to Krogstad’s presence,
and Dr. Rank, coming out of the study, says Krogstad is “morally sick.” Once he
has finished meeting with Krogstad, Torvald comes into the living room and says
that he can probably hire Mrs. Linde at the bank. Dr. Rank, Torvald, and Mrs.
Linde then depart, leaving Nora by herself. Nora’s children return with their
nanny, Anne-Marie, and Nora plays with them until she notices Krogstad’s
presence in the room. The two converse, and Krogstad is revealed to be the
source of Nora’s secret loan.
Krogstad states that Torvald wants to fire him from his position at the
bank and alludes to his own poor reputation. He asks Nora to use her influence
to ensure that his position remains secure. When she refuses, Krogstad points
out that he has in his possession a contract that contains Nora’s forgery of
her father’s signature. Krogstad blackmails Nora, threatening to reveal her
crime and to bring shame and disgrace on both Nora and her husband if she does
not prevent Torvald from firing him. Krogstad leaves, and when Torvald returns,
Nora tries to convince him not to fire Krogstad, but Torvald will hear nothing
of it. He declares Krogstad an immoral man and states that he feels physically
ill in the presence of such people.
Act Two opens on the following day, Christmas. Alone, Nora paces her
living room, filled with anxiety. Mrs. Linde arrives and helps sew Nora’s costume
for the ball that Nora will be attending at her neighbors’ home the following
evening. Nora tells Mrs. Linde that Dr. Rank has a mortal illness that he
inherited from his father. Nora’s suspicious behavior leads Mrs. Linde to guess
that Dr. Rank is the source of Nora’s loan. Nora denies Mrs. Linde’s charge but
refuses to reveal the source of her distress. Torvald arrives, and Nora again
begs him to keep Krogstad employed at the bank, but again Torvald refuses. When
Nora presses him, he admits that Krogstad’s moral behavior isn’t all that
bothers him—he dislikes Krogstad’s overly familiar attitude. Torvald and Nora
argue until Torvald sends the maid to deliver Krogstad’s letter of dismissal.
Torvald leaves. Dr. Rank arrives and tells Nora that he knows he is
close to death. She attempts to cheer him up and begins to flirt with him. She
seems to be preparing to ask him to intervene on her behalf in her struggle
with Torvald. Suddenly, Dr. Rank reveals to Nora that he is in love with her.
In light of this revelation, Nora refuses to ask Dr. Rank for anything.
Once Dr. Rank leaves, Krogstad arrives and demands an explanation for
his dismissal. He wants respectability and has changed the terms of the
blackmail: he now insists to Nora that not only that he be rehired at the bank
but that he be rehired in a higher position. He then puts a letter detailing
Nora’s debt and forgery in the -Helmers’ letterbox. In a panic, Nora tells Mrs.
Linde everything, and Mrs. Linde instructs Nora to delay Torvald from opening
the letter as long as possible while she goes to speak with Krogstad. In order
to distract Torvald from the letterbox, Nora begins to practice the tarantella
she will perform at that evening’s costume party. In her agitated emotional
state, she dances wildly and violently, displeasing Torvald. Nora manages to
make Torvald promise not to open his mail until after she performs at the
party. Mrs. Linde soon returns and says that she has left Krogstad a note but
that he will be gone until the following evening.
The next night, as the costume party takes place upstairs, Krogstad
meets Mrs. Linde in the Helmers’ living room. Their conversation reveals that
the two had once deeply in love, but Mrs. Linde left Krogstad for a wealthier
man who would enable her to support her family. She tells Krogstad that now
that she is free of her own familial obligations and wishes to be with Krogstad
and care for his children. Krogstad is overjoyed and says he will demand his
letter back before Torvald can read it and learn Nora’s secret. Mrs. Linde,
however, insists he leave the letter, because she believes both Torvald and
Nora will be better off once the truth has been revealed.
Soon after Krogstad’s departure, Nora and Torvald enter, back from the
costume ball. After saying goodnight to Mrs. Linde, Torvald tells Nora how
desirable she looked as she danced. Dr. Rank, who was also at the party and has
come to say goodnight, promptly interrupts Torvald’s advances on Nora. After
Dr. Rank leaves, Torvald finds in his letterbox two of Dr. Rank’s visiting
cards, each with a black cross above the name. Nora knows Dr. Rank’s cards
constitute his announcement that he will soon die, and she informs Torvald of
this fact. She then insists that Torvald read Krogstad’s letter.
Torvald reads the letter and is outraged. He calls Nora a hypocrite and
a liar and complains that she has ruined his happiness. He declares that she
will not be allowed to raise their children. Helene then brings in a letter.
Torvald opens it and discovers that Krogstad has returned Nora’s contract
(which contains the forged signature). Overjoyed, Torvald attempts to dismiss
his past insults, but his harsh words have triggered something in Nora. She
declares that despite their eight years of marriage, they do not understand one
another. Torvald, Nora asserts, has treated her like a “doll” to be played with
and admired. She decides to leave Torvald, declaring that she must “make sense
of [her]self and everything around her.” She walks out, slamming the door
behind her.
Character List
In some editions of A Doll’s House, the speech prompts refer to the
character of Torvald Helmer as “Torvald;” in others, they refer to him as
“Helmer.” Similarly, in some editions, Mrs. Linde’s first name is spelled
“Christine” rather than “Kristine.”
Nora - The protagonist of the play and the wife of Torvald
Helmer. Nora initially seems like a playful, naïve child who lacks knowledge of
the world outside her home. She does have some worldly experience, however, and
the small acts of rebellion in which she engages indicate that she is not as
innocent or happy as she appears. She comes to see her position in her marriage
with increasing clarity and finds the strength to free herself from her
oppressive situation.
Torvald Helmer - Nora’s husband. Torvald delights in his new
position at the bank, just as he delights in his position of authority as a
husband. He treats Nora like a child, in a manner that is both kind and
patronizing. He does not view Nora as an equal but rather as a plaything or doll to
be teased and admired. In general, Torvald is overly concerned with his place
and status in society, and he allows his emotions to be swayed heavily by
the prospect of society’s respect and the fear of society’s scorn.
Krogstad - A lawyer who went to school with Torvald and holds
a subordinate position at Torvald’s bank. Krogstad’s character is
contradictory: though his bad deeds seem to stem from a desire to protect his
children from scorn, he is perfectly willing to use unethical tactics to achieve
his goals. His willingness to allow Nora to suffer is despicable, but his
claims to feel sympathy for her and the hard circumstances of his own life
compel us to sympathize with him to some degree.
Mrs. Linde - Nora’s childhood friend. Kristine Linde is a
practical, down-to-earth woman, and her sensible worldview highlights Nora’s
somewhat childlike outlook on life. Mrs. Linde’s account of her life of poverty
underscores the privileged nature of the life that Nora leads. Also, we learn
that Mrs. Linde took responsibility for her sick parent, whereas Nora abandoned
her father when he was ill.
Dr. Rank - Torvald’s best friend. Dr. Rank stands out as the
one character in the play who is by and large unconcerned with what others
think of him. He is also notable for his stoic acceptance of his fate. Unlike
Torvald and Nora, Dr. Rank admits to the diseased nature (literally, in his
case) of his life. For the most part, he avoids talking to Torvald about his
imminent death out of respect for Torvald’s distaste for ugliness.
Bob, Emmy, and Ivar - Nora and Torvald’s three small
children. In her brief interaction with her children, Nora
shows herself to be a loving mother. When she later refuses to spend
time with her children because she fears she may morally corrupt them,
Nora acts on her belief that the quality of parenting strongly influences
a child’s development.
Anne-Marie - The Helmers’ nanny. Though Ibsen doesn’t fully
develop her character, Anne-Marie seems to be a kindly woman who has genuine
affection for Nora. She had to give up her own daughter in order to take the
nursing job offered by Nora’s father. Thus, she shares with Nora and Mrs. Linde
the act of sacrificing her own happiness out of economic necessity.
Nora’s father - Though Nora’s father is dead before the
action of the play begins, the characters refer to him throughout the play.
Though she clearly loves and admires her father, Nora also comes to blame him
for contributing to her subservient position in life.
Analysis of Major Characters
Nora Helmer
At the beginning of A Doll’s House, Nora seems completely happy. She
responds affectionately to Torvald’s teasing, speaks with excitement about the
extra money his new job will provide, and takes pleasure in the company of her
children and friends. She does not seem to mind her doll-like existence, in
which she is coddled, pampered, and patronized.
As the play progresses, Nora reveals that she is not just a “silly
girl,” as Torvald calls her. That she understands the business details related
to the debt she incurred taking out a loan to preserve Torvald’s health
indicates that she is intelligent and possesses capacities beyond mere
wifehood. Her description of her years of secret labor undertaken to pay off
her debt shows her fierce determination and ambition. Additionally, the fact
that she was willing to break the law in order to ensure Torvald’s health shows
her courage.
Krogstad’s blackmail and the trauma that follows do not change Nora’s
nature; they open her eyes to her unfulfilled and underappreciated potential.
“I have been performing tricks for you, Torvald,” she says during her climactic
confrontation with him. Nora comes to realize that in addition to her literal
dancing and singing tricks, she has been putting on a show throughout her
marriage. She has pretended to be someone she is not in order to fulfill the
role that Torvald, her father, and society at large have expected of her.
Torvald’s severe and selfish reaction after learning of Nora’s deception
and forgery is the final catalyst for Nora’s awakening. But even in the first
act, Nora shows that she is not totally unaware that her life is at odds with
her true personality. She defies Torvald in small yet meaningful ways—by eating
macaroons and then lying to him about it, for instance. She also swears,
apparently just for the pleasure she derives from minor rebellion against
societal standards. As the drama unfolds, and as Nora’s awareness of the truth
about her life grows, her need for rebellion escalates, culminating in her
walking out on her husband and children to find independence.
Torvald Helmer
Torvald embraces the belief that a man’s role in marriage is to protect
and guide his wife. He clearly enjoys the idea that Nora needs his guidance,
and he interacts with her as a father would. He instructs her with trite,
moralistic sayings, such as: “A home that depends on loans and debt is not
beautiful because it is not free.” He is also eager to teach Nora the dance she
performs at the costume party. Torvald likes to envision himself as Nora’s
savior, asking her after the party, “[D]o you know that I’ve often wished you
were facing some terrible dangers so that I could risk life and limb, risk
everything, for your sake?”
Although Torvald seizes the power in his relationship with Nora and
refers to her as a “girl,” it seems that Torvald is actually the weaker and
more childlike character. Dr. Rank’s explanation for not wanting Torvald to
enter his sickroom—”Torvald is so fastidious, he cannot face up to anything
ugly”—suggests that Dr. Rank feels Torvald must be sheltered like a child from
the realities of the world. Furthermore, Torvald reveals himself to be
childishly petty at times. His real objection to working with Krogstad stems
not from -deficiencies in Krogstad’s moral character but, rather, Krogstad’s
overly friendly and familiar behavior. Torvald’s decision to fire Krogstad
stems ultimately from the fact that he feels threatened and offended by
Krogstad’s failure to pay him the proper respect.
Torvald is very conscious of other people’s perceptions of him and of
his standing in the community. His explanation for rejecting Nora’s request
that Krogstad be kept on at the office—that retaining Krogstad would make him
“a laughing stock before the entire staff”—shows that he prioritizes his
reputation over his wife’s desires. Torvald further demonstrates his deep need
for society’s respect in his reaction to Nora’s deception. Although he says
that Nora has ruined his happiness and will not be allowed to raise the
children, he insists that she remain in the house because his chief concern is
saving “the appearance” of their household.
Krogstad
Krogstad is the antagonist in A Doll’s House, but he is not necessarily
a villain. Though his willingness to allow Nora’s torment to continue is cruel,
Krogstad is not without sympathy for her. As he says, “Even money-lenders,
hacks, well, a man like me, can have a little of what you call feeling, you
know.” He visits Nora to check on her, and he discourages her from committing
suicide. Moreover, Krogstad has reasonable motives for behaving as he does: he
wants to keep his job at the bank in order to spare his children from the
hardships that come with a spoiled reputation. Unlike Torvald, who seems to
desire respect for selfish reasons, Krogstad desires it for his family’s sake.
Like Nora, Krogstad is a person who has been wronged by society, and
both Nora and Krogstad have committed the same crime: forgery of signatures.
Though he did break the law, Krogstad’s crime was relatively minor, but society
has saddled him with the stigma of being a criminal and prohibited him from
moving beyond his past. Additionally, Krogstad’s claim that his immoral
behavior began when Mrs. Linde abandoned him for a man with money so she could
provide for her family makes it possible for us to understand Krogstad as a
victim of circumstances. One could argue that society forced Mrs. Linde away
from Krogstad and thus prompted his crime. Though society’s unfair treatment of
Krogstad does not justify his actions, it does align him more closely with Nora
and therefore tempers our perception of him as a despicable character.
Themes, Motifs & Symbols
Themes
Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a
literary work.
The Sacrificial Role of Women
In A Doll’s House, Ibsen paints a bleak picture of the sacrificial role
held by women of all economic classes in his society. In general, the play’s
female characters exemplify Nora’s assertion (spoken to Torvald in Act Three)
that even though men refuse to sacrifice their integrity, “hundreds of
thousands of women have.” In order to support her mother and two brothers, Mrs.
Linde found it necessary to abandon Krogstad, her true—but penniless—love, and
marry a richer man. The nanny had to abandon her own child to support herself
by working as Nora’s (and then as Nora’s children’s) caretaker. As she tells
Nora, the nanny considers herself lucky to have found the job, since she was “a
poor girl who’d been led astray.”
Though Nora is economically advantaged in comparison to the play’s other
female characters, she nevertheless leads a difficult life because society
dictates that Torvald be the marriage’s dominant partner. Torvald issues
decrees and condescends to Nora, and Nora must hide her loan from him because
she knows Torvald could never accept the idea that his wife (or any other
woman) had helped save his life. Furthermore, she must work in secret to pay
off her loan because it is illegal for a woman to obtain a loan without her
husband’s permission. By motivating Nora’s deception, the attitudes of
Torvald—and society—leave Nora vulnerable to Krogstad’s blackmail.
Nora’s abandonment of her children can also be interpreted as an act of
self- sacrifice. Despite Nora’s great love for her children—manifested by her
interaction with them and her great fear of corrupting them—she chooses to
leave them. Nora truly believes that the nanny will be a better mother and that
leaving her children is in their best interest.
Parental and Filial Obligations
Nora, Torvald, and Dr. Rank each express the belief that a parent is
obligated to be honest and upstanding, because a parent’s immorality is passed
on to his or her children like a disease. In fact, Dr. Rank does have a disease
that is the result of his father’s depravity. Dr. Rank implies that his
father’s immorality—his many affairs with women—led him to contract a venereal
disease that he passed on to his son, causing Dr. Rank to suffer for his
father’s misdeeds. Torvald voices the idea that one’s parents determine one’s
moral character when he tells Nora, “Nearly all young criminals had lying
-mothers.” He also refuses to allow Nora to interact with their children after
he learns of her deceit, for fear that she will corrupt them.
Yet, the play suggests that children too are obligated to protect their
parents. Nora recognized this obligation, but she ignored it, choosing to be
with—and sacrifice herself for—her sick husband instead of her sick father.
Mrs. Linde, on the other hand, abandoned her hopes of being with Krogstad and
undertook years of labor in order to tend to her sick mother. Ibsen does not
pass judgment on either woman’s decision, but he does use the idea of a child’s
debt to her parent to demonstrate the complexity and reciprocal nature of familial
obligations.
The Unreliability of Appearances
Over the course of A Doll’s House, appearances prove to be misleading
veneers that mask the reality of the play’s characters and -situations. Our
first impressions of Nora, Torvald, and Krogstad are all eventually undercut.
Nora initially seems a silly, childish woman, but as the play progresses, we
see that she is intelligent, motivated, and, by the play’s conclusion, a
strong-willed, independent thinker. Torvald, though he plays the part of the strong,
benevolent husband, reveals himself to be cowardly, petty, and selfish when he
fears that Krogstad may expose him to scandal. Krogstad too reveals himself to
be a much more sympathetic and merciful character than he first appears to be.
The play’s climax is largely a matter of resolving identity confusion—we see
Krogstad as an earnest lover, Nora as an intelligent, brave woman, and Torvald
as a simpering, sad man.
Situations too are misinterpreted both by us and by the characters. The
seeming hatred between Mrs. Linde and Krogstad turns out to be love. Nora’s
creditor turns out to be Krogstad and not, as we and Mrs. Linde suppose, Dr.
Rank. Dr. Rank, to Nora’s and our surprise, confesses that he is in love with
her. The seemingly villainous Krogstad repents and returns Nora’s contract to
her, while the seemingly kindhearted Mrs. Linde ceases to help Nora and forces
Torvald’s discovery of Nora’s secret.
The instability of appearances within the Helmer household at the play’s
end results from Torvald’s devotion to an image at the expense of the creation
of true happiness. Because Torvald craves respect from his employees, friends,
and wife, status and image are important to him. Any disrespect—when Nora calls
him petty and when Krogstad calls him by his first name, for example—angers
Torvald greatly. By the end of the play, we see that Torvald’s obsession with
controlling his home’s appearance and his repeated suppression and denial of
reality have harmed his family and his happiness irreparably.
Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can
help to develop and inform the text’s major themes.
Nora’s Definition of Freedom
Nora’s understanding of the meaning of freedom evolves over the course
of the play. In the first act, she believes that she will be totally “free” as
soon as she has repaid her debt, because she will have the opportunity to
devote herself fully to her domestic responsibilities. After Krogstad
blackmails her, however, she reconsiders her conception of freedom and
questions whether she is happy in Torvald’s house, subjected to his orders and
edicts. By the end of the play, Nora seeks a new kind of freedom. She wishes to
be relieved of her familial obligations in order to pursue her own ambitions,
beliefs, and identity.
Letters
Many of the plot’s twists and turns depend upon the writing and reading
of letters, which function within the play as the subtext that reveals the
true, unpleasant nature of situations obscured by Torvald and Nora’s efforts at
beautification. Krogstad writes two letters: the first reveals Nora’s crime of
forgery to Torvald; the second retracts his blackmail threat and returns Nora’s
promissory note. The first letter, which Krogstad places in Torvald’s letterbox
near the end of Act Two, represents the truth about Nora’s past and initiates
the inevitable dissolution of her marriage—as Nora says immediately after
Krogstad leaves it, “We are lost.” Nora’s attempts to stall Torvald from
reading the letter represent her continued denial of the true nature of her marriage.
The second letter releases Nora from her obligation to Krogstad and represents
her release from her obligation to Torvald. Upon reading it, Torvald attempts
to return to his and Nora’s previous denial of reality, but Nora recognizes
that the letters have done more than expose her actions to Torvald; they have
exposed the truth about Torvald’s selfishness, and she can no longer
participate in the illusion of a happy marriage.
Dr. Rank’s method of communicating his imminent death is to leave his
calling card marked with a black cross in Torvald’s letterbox. In an earlier
conversation with Nora, Dr. Rank reveals his understanding of Torvald’s
unwillingness to accept reality when he proclaims, “Torvald is so
fastidious, he cannot face up to -anything ugly.” By leaving his calling card
as a death notice, Dr. Rank politely attempts to keep Torvald from the “ugly”
truth. Other letters include Mrs. Linde’s note to Krogstad, which initiates her
-life-changing meeting with him, and Torvald’s letter of dismissal to Krogstad.
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent
abstract ideas or concepts.
The Christmas Tree
The Christmas tree, a festive object meant to serve a decorative
purpose, symbolizes Nora’s position in her household as a plaything who is
pleasing to look at and adds charm to the home. There are several parallels
drawn between Nora and the Christmas tree in the play. Just as Nora instructs
the maid that the children cannot see the tree until it has been decorated, she
tells Torvald that no one can see her in her dress until the evening of the
dance. Also, at the beginning of the second act, after Nora’s psychological
condition has begun to erode, the stage directions indicate that the Christmas
tree is correspondingly “dishevelled.”
New Year’s Day
The action of the play is set at Christmastime, and Nora and Torvald
both look forward to New Year’s as the start of a new, happier phase in their
lives. In the new year, Torvald will start his new job, and he anticipates with
excitement the extra money and admiration the job will bring him. Nora also
looks forward to Torvald’s new job, because she will finally be able to repay
her secret debt to Krogstad. By the end of the play, however, the nature of the
new start that New Year’s represents for Torvald and Nora has changed
dramatically. They both must become new people and face radically changed ways
of living. Hence, the new year comes to mark the beginning of a truly new and
different period in both their lives and their personalities.
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