The Doll's House : a play eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 112 pages of information about The Doll's House .

The Doll's House : a play eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 112 pages of information about The Doll's House .

Mrs. Linde.  Yes, that was what I was thinking of.

Nora.  He must, Christine.  Just leave it to me; I will broach the subject very cleverly—­I will think of something that will please him very much.  It will make me so happy to be of some use to you.

Mrs. Linde.  How kind you are, Nora, to be so anxious to help me!  It is doubly kind in you, for you know so little of the burdens and troubles of life.

Nora.  I—?  I know so little of them?

Mrs. Linde (smiling).  My dear!  Small household cares and that sort of thing!—­You are a child, Nora.

Nora (tosses her head and crosses the stage).  You ought not to be so superior.

Mrs. Linde.  No?

Nora.  You are just like the others.  They all think that I am incapable of anything really serious—­

Mrs. Linde.  Come, come—­

Nora.—­that I have gone through nothing in this world of cares.

Mrs. Linde.  But, my dear Nora, you have just told me all your troubles.

Nora.  Pooh!—­those were trifles. (Lowering her voice.) I have not told you the important thing.

Mrs. Linde.  The important thing?  What do you mean?

Nora.  You look down upon me altogether, Christine—­but you ought not to.  You are proud, aren’t you, of having worked so hard and so long for your mother?

Mrs. Linde.  Indeed, I don’t look down on anyone.  But it is true that I am both proud and glad to think that I was privileged to make the end of my mother’s life almost free from care.

Nora.  And you are proud to think of what you have done for your brothers?

Mrs. Linde.  I think I have the right to be.

Nora.  I think so, too.  But now, listen to this; I too have something to be proud and glad of.

Mrs. Linde.  I have no doubt you have.  But what do you refer to?

Nora.  Speak low.  Suppose Torvald were to hear!  He mustn’t on any account—­no one in the world must know, Christine, except you.

Mrs. Linde.  But what is it?

Nora.  Come here. (Pulls her down on the sofa beside her.) Now I will show you that I too have something to be proud and glad of.  It was I who saved Torvald’s life.

Mrs. Linde.  “Saved”?  How?

Nora.  I told you about our trip to Italy.  Torvald would never have recovered if he had not gone there—­

Mrs. Linde.  Yes, but your father gave you the necessary funds.

Nora (smiling).  Yes, that is what Torvald and all the others think, but—­

Mrs. Linde.  But—­

Nora.  Papa didn’t give us a shilling.  It was I who procured the money.

Mrs. Linde.  You?  All that large sum?

Nora.  Two hundred and fifty pounds.  What do you think of that?

Mrs. Linde.  But, Nora, how could you possibly do it?  Did you win a prize in the Lottery?

Nora (contemptuously).  In the Lottery?  There would have been no credit in that.

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The Doll's House : a play from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.