Ghosts Henrik Ibsen (good novels to read in english txt) đ
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- Author: Henrik Ibsen
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epub:type="z3998:persona">Oswald
I cannot go on bearing all this anguish of soul alone.
Mrs. Alving
Have you not your mother to share it with you?
Oswald
Yes; thatâs what I thought; and so I came home to you. But that will not do. I see it wonât do. I cannot endure my life here.
Mrs. Alving
Oswald!
Oswald
I must live differently, Mother. That is why I must leave you. I will not have you looking on at it.
Mrs. Alving
My unhappy boy! But, Oswald, while you are so ill as thisâ â
Oswald
If it were only the illness, I should stay with you, Mother, you may be sure; for you are the best friend I have in the world.
Mrs. Alving
Yes, indeed I am, Oswald; am I not?
Oswald
Wanders restlessly about. But itâs all the torment, the gnawing remorseâ âand then, the great, killing dread. Ohâ âthat awful dread!
Mrs. Alving
Walking after him. Dread? What dread? What do you mean?
Oswald
Oh, you mustnât ask me any more. I donât know. I canât describe it.
Mrs. Alving
Goes over to the right and pulls the bell.
Oswald
What is it you want?
Mrs. Alving
I want my boy to be happyâ âthat is what I want. He shanât go on brooding over things. To Regina, who appears at the door: More champagneâ âa large bottle. Regina goes.
Oswald
Mother!
Mrs. Alving
Do you think we donât know how to live here at home?
Oswald
Isnât she splendid to look at? How beautifully sheâs built! And so thoroughly healthy!
Mrs. Alving
Sits by the table. Sit down, Oswald; let us talk quietly together.
Oswald
Sits. I daresay you donât know, Mother, that I owe Regina some reparation.
Mrs. Alving
You!
Oswald
For a bit of thoughtlessness, or whatever you like to call itâ âvery innocent, at any rate. When I was home last timeâ â
Mrs. Alving
Well?
Oswald
She used often to ask me about Paris, and I used to tell her one thing and another. Then I recollect I happened to say to her one day, âShouldnât you like to go there yourself?â
Mrs. Alving
Well?
Oswald
I saw her face flush, and then she said, âYes, I should like it of all things.â âAh, well,â I replied, âit might perhaps be managedââ âor something like that.
Mrs. Alving
And then?
Oswald
Of course I had forgotten all about it; but the day before yesterday I happened to ask her whether she was glad I was to stay at home so longâ â
Mrs. Alving
Yes?
Oswald
And then she gave me such a strange look, and asked, âBut whatâs to become of my trip to Paris?â
Mrs. Alving
Her trip!
Oswald
And so it came out that she had taken the thing seriously; that she had been thinking of me the whole time, and had set to work to learn Frenchâ â
Mrs. Alving
So that was whyâ â!
Oswald
Motherâ âwhen I saw that fresh, lovely, splendid girl standing there before meâ âtill then I had hardly noticed herâ âbut when she stood there as though with open arms ready to receive meâ â
Mrs. Alving
Oswald!
Oswald
âthen it flashed upon me that in her lay my salvation; for I saw that she was full of the joy of life.
Mrs. Alving
Starts. The joy of life? Can there be salvation in that?
Regina
From the dining room, with a bottle of champagne. Iâm sorry to have been so long, but I had to go to the cellar. Places the bottle on the table.
Oswald
And now bring another glass.
Regina
Looks at him in surprise. There is Mrs. Alvingâs glass, Mr. Alving.
Oswald
Yes, but bring one for yourself, Regina. Regina starts and gives a lightning-like side glance at Mrs. Alving. Why do you wait?
Regina
Softly and hesitatingly. Is it Mrs. Alvingâs wish?
Mrs. Alving
Bring the glass, Regina.
Regina goes out into the dining room.
Oswald
Follows her with his eyes. Have you noticed how she walks?â âso firmly and lightly!
Mrs. Alving
This can never be, Oswald!
Oswald
Itâs a settled thing. Canât you see that? Itâs no use saying anything against it.
Regina enters with an empty glass, which she keeps in her hand.
Oswald
Sit down, Regina.
Regina looks inquiringly at Mrs. Alving.
Mrs. Alving
Sit down. Regina sits on a chair by the dining room door, still holding the empty glass in her hand. Oswaldâ âwhat were you saying about the joy of life?
Oswald
Ah, the joy of life, Motherâ âthatâs a thing you donât know much about in these parts. I have never felt it here.
Mrs. Alving
Not when you are with me?
Oswald
Not when Iâm at home. But you donât understand that.
Mrs. Alving
Yes, yes; I think I almost understand itâ ânow.
Oswald
And then, too, the joy of work! At bottom, itâs the same thing. But that, too, you know nothing about.
Mrs. Alving
Perhaps you are right. Tell me more about it, Oswald.
Oswald
I only mean that here people are brought up to believe that work is a curse and a punishment for sin, and that life is something miserable, something it would be best to have done with, the sooner the better.
Mrs. Alving
âA vale of tears,â yes; and we certainly do our best to make it one.
Oswald
But in the great world people wonât hear of such things. There, nobody really believes such doctrines any longer. There, you feel it a positive bliss and ecstasy merely to draw the breath of life. Mother, have you noticed that everything I have painted has turned upon the joy of life?â âalways, always upon the joy of life?â âlight and sunshine and glorious air and faces radiant with happiness. That is why Iâm afraid of remaining at home with you.
Mrs. Alving
Afraid? What are you afraid of here, with me?
Oswald
Iâm afraid lest all my instincts should be warped into ugliness.
Mrs. Alving
Looks steadily at him. Do you think that is what would happen?
Oswald
I know it. You may live the same life here as there, and yet it wonât be the same life.
Mrs. Alving
Who has been listening eagerly, rises, her eyes big with thought, and says: Now I see the sequence of things.
Oswald
What is it you see?
Mrs. Alving
I see it now for the first time. And now I can speak.
Oswald
Rising. Mother, I donât
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