Hedda: I’m just looking at the leaves---they’re so yellow---and so withered” ( Ibsen 232).
This dialogue between the pair is one of many illustrations in the play where a character is unable to see past Hedda’s manipulation. The symbol of autumn is associated with tragedy and death, which foreshadows the impending catastrophe in the play’s final stages. For Hedda, as she counts the total months of her pregnancy, she does not accept the life growing within her and does not want her baby to become another thing trapping her into a life with the Tesmans, and ultimately a new class that she does not accept as her own. Her attitude is made even more dramatic when juxtaposed against Tesman’s who ironically believes that the month of September will bring hope and the possibility of new life and growth, since it is the start of a new year. Hedda’s tone and agitation in this scene where she appears. “once more restless”(Ibsen 232), suggest that it is time, or a lack thereof that ultimately forces her to commit a …show more content…
When Tesman addresses Hedda about Aunt Julie’s peculiar behaviour, she replies angrily, “But really, what kind of manner has she to go throwing her hat about in a drawing room! It’s just not proper” (Ibsen 232). Hedda is not pleased with Aunt Julie being comfortable within the household. It is evident from her tone, that she wants the other characters to understand their place in society and in the family itself. Hedda considers herself as superior due to her class and Ibsen gives reminders of the class tension within the household. By saying “I’m just looking at my old piano. It doesn’t really fit with all these other things” (Ibsen 232), Hedda creates the impression that just as the piano does not fit in the drawing room, Hedda’s aristocratic life style and values do not fit into the Tesman family, with their bourgeoisie lifestyle and values. Throughout the play, Hedda Gabler is depicted as a character who is going through an internal struggle, as she attempts to break out of a life that she brought upon herself. The use of literary devices, stages actions and dialogue demonstrate how trapped Hedda feels, both by the setting she finds herself in and the lifestyle she has married into. Ibsen foreshadows throughout the play Hedda’s inability to cope with the changes in her life, suggesting that it is only a matter of time before Hedda is pushed to