The Struggle of Nora Helmer
The Struggle of Nora Helmer In the play, A Doll House, Nora Helmer is a house wife who experiences an unexpected event with her husband, Torvald, which led to a whole new understanding of her life and what she was going to do with it. Nora would always try to do anything that she could to please her husband so that she would always keep him happy towards her and never give him a reason to leave her because she felt that she loved him so much and she would not know what to do without him. Nora would constantly lie to make sure that Torvald was happy and she would make sure that he would not find out. At the beginning of the play, Nora was being accused by Torvald of eating macaroons and she stated “You know I could never think of going against you” (I). This was just the start of the lies that Nora would tell Torvald just to make him happy. In the middle of the play, Mr. Krogstad told her husband about a major lie that she had told and it led to her questioning her lifestyle and the people who were in it. At the end of the play, Nora learned that she never really loved Torvald, she was just his doll, and that they had never had a serious conversation in all their years of marriage. Torvald got deathly ill and the only way that he would live was if Nora took him out of town. Nora received a loan from Mr. Krogstad at the bank so that she was able to pay for the trip that she was going to take Torvald on so that he was able to live. Mr. Krogstad said that Nora needed to get a signature for the form for the loan by her father, but he was on the verge of passing away so she forged his signature and wrote in the date. Mr. Krogstad figured out that Nora had forged her father’s signature because the date that was signed on the form was after her father had passed. Krogstad believed that he was about to lose his job and he was clear that “if he got shoved down a second time, Nora’s going to keep him company” (I). He warned Nora that if she did not convince Torvald
Cited: Ibsen, Henrik, Rick Davis, and Brian Johnson. A Doll House. [United States]: Smith and Kraus Play Licensing, 2006. Print.