Everything in the play from Nora hiding the macaroons from Torvald to Krogstad leaving the letter leads up to the ending scene in act three. When Torvald gets the blackmail letter he starts to worry about his reputation and, then proceeds to scold Nora for being featherbrained and irresponsible. Despite the fact that Nora borrowed the money to save his life. Torvald asks Nora if she understand what she has done and Nora responds “yes. I am beginning to understand everything now” (Ibsen 1292). It is at this point that Nora realizes that Torvald never really loved her and as Unni Lagas stated “he treats her superficially like a toy” (162). After the follow up letter from Krogstad where he gives Nora the note to destroy, Torvald is relieved and says he forgives Nora. At this point Nora has already made up her mind that she needs to leave to find herself and become who she is supposed to be. She went from her father’s home to Torvald’s. Nora told Torvald “I have been your doll-wife her, just as at home I was Papa’s doll-child. And in turn the children have been my dolls” (Ibsen 1295). Nora decides it is time to break the cycle. She wants to go out and educate herself. As Josephine Lee says “Nora’s insistence upon this demonstration of selfhood means that she refuses her earlier roles of wife and mother in order to become a free agent” (624). Nora decides she needs to be her own person. Epiphany is one of the
Everything in the play from Nora hiding the macaroons from Torvald to Krogstad leaving the letter leads up to the ending scene in act three. When Torvald gets the blackmail letter he starts to worry about his reputation and, then proceeds to scold Nora for being featherbrained and irresponsible. Despite the fact that Nora borrowed the money to save his life. Torvald asks Nora if she understand what she has done and Nora responds “yes. I am beginning to understand everything now” (Ibsen 1292). It is at this point that Nora realizes that Torvald never really loved her and as Unni Lagas stated “he treats her superficially like a toy” (162). After the follow up letter from Krogstad where he gives Nora the note to destroy, Torvald is relieved and says he forgives Nora. At this point Nora has already made up her mind that she needs to leave to find herself and become who she is supposed to be. She went from her father’s home to Torvald’s. Nora told Torvald “I have been your doll-wife her, just as at home I was Papa’s doll-child. And in turn the children have been my dolls” (Ibsen 1295). Nora decides it is time to break the cycle. She wants to go out and educate herself. As Josephine Lee says “Nora’s insistence upon this demonstration of selfhood means that she refuses her earlier roles of wife and mother in order to become a free agent” (624). Nora decides she needs to be her own person. Epiphany is one of the