Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Little Eyolf
created by
futurebird
(
thing
) by
futurebird
(2.4 y)
(
print
)
?
(
I like it!
)
1
C!
Tue Mar 13 2001 at 9:02:24
Little Eyolf
is a play by
Henrik Ibsen
(
1828
-
1906
).
cleansing through the invasion of nature:
In the opening scene of the play we might be in any typical living room
melodrama
.
Subjective
abstraction
and nature (both elements of
impressionism
) have a presence, but they do not yet dominate play. Similarly,
poetry
and
symbolism
are only lightly present in the
dialog
. The characters speak in an almost natural manner, cutting each other off and talking mostly of
mundane
, logistical things. Eyolf himself seems an ordinary enough boy (if a little stuck up and self conscious due to his
disability
) A quick read would reveal nothing out of the ordinary.
Still, there are phrases that stand out. Allmers seems to slip into a different state when he speaks of the mountains, but the subject is quickly dropped and the discussion returns to more ordinary matters.
The world is further upset by the entrance of the
rat wife
. She not only reminds us of the tale of the
pied piper
in her
symbolic
role in the play but also, through her language, serves up some disturbing
imagery
: "
Up in the beds clambering and clawing the whole night long. Down into the milk pails they plopped. Over floorboards, scrambling and scuttling this way and that.
" It is noteworthy that the image of swarming rats is again tied to the invasion of the natural world.
In the second act we've moved outside, though unlike the third act, nature presents little immediate danger.As the plot advances so does the influence of symbolism, nature and poetry on the play. In act two an image is revealed that will come to dominate the play, illustrating the major difficulties of the
protagonist
s (Allmers and Rita) That image is the wide open eyes of the little boy as he sinks into the undertow. The
eyes
are and accusation that fuels Rita's madness and Allmers need for atonement and eventually Asta's desire to escape.
At last we are confronted with not only the presence of nature but with danger (the cliff) by this point in the play poetry is everywhere the mentions of the day to day details are gone. The characters are grappling with the abstract flaw that seems to be at the root of their misery. Strikingly, the invasion of nature and the tragic events of the play have a positive effect in the lives of the characters. You could almost call it a happy ending.
Perhaps, like the
impressionists
, Ibsen's aim has been to allow us to re-see the
tragedy
of the play and in that way discover how a change of outlook (or of light) can transform what we see.
printable version
chaos
ECO Chess Codes
Finnegan's Wake
Henrik Ibsen
Pied Piper
Y'know, if you
log in
, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site.
Create a New User
if you don't already have an account.
Login
Password
remember me
password reminder
register
Everything2 Help
What you are reading:
For a lawyer she was surprisingly like a child. Sometimes.
Charlotte Corday
Muhammad Ali
Beowulf on Everything
Manifesto of Futurist Musicians
4'33"
Footprints is a Gay Black Hippie Jew
anthropic principle
Some like it in the pot, nine days old
How to play Mao
Chronology of Library Development in Antiquity
Dirt in my hair and toenails
Ground Control to Major Tom
gate
Anarchy is Order
(
idea
)
ushdfgakjasgh
Scribeling
(
thing
)
XWiz
Trism
(
review
)
artman2003
Briefcase Full of Souls - Part I
(
fiction
)
Dreamvirus
Alan Ladd
(
person
)
waverider37
Harold Holt
(
person
)
The Debutante
Until death do us part
(
fiction
)
Ysardo
a brother to a sister
(
personal
)
antigravpussy
your warm whispers
(
personal
)
Clarke
Multiculturalism
(
idea
)
aneurin
Earl of Landaff
(
person
)
Heitah
Pseudocide
(
idea
)
XWiz
Google Knol
(
lede
)
Mythi
July 24, 2008
(
personal
)
locke baron
The fall of Earth
(
fiction
)
This affordable entertainment brought to you by
The Everything Development Company