English
English, 29.06.2019 21:00, jor66

Read the excerpt from act 3 of a doll's house. helmer: how unreasonable and how ungrateful you are, nora! have you not been happy here? nora: no, i have never been happy. i thought i was, but it has never really been so. helmer: not—not happy! nora: no, only merry. and you have always been so kind to me. but our home has been nothing but a playroom. i have been your doll-wife, just as at home i was papa's doll-child; and here the children have been my dolls. i thought it great fun when you played with me, just as they thought it great fun when i played with them. that is what our marriage has been, torvald. what prediction does the text best support? helmer is going to change how he treats nora. helmer is going to leave nora and the children. nora is going to leave helmer and the children. nora is going to tell helmer to treat her better.

answer
Answers: 1

Similar questions

Предмет
English, 24.06.2019 04:30, negritobull78
Read the excerpt from act 2 of a doll's house. helmer: rank led me to expect a splendid transformation. rank: [in the doorway] i understood so, but evidently i was mistaken. nora: yes, nobody is to have the chance of admiring me in my dress until tomorrow. helmer: but, my dear nora, you look so worn out. have you been practising too much? nora: no, i have not practised at all. helmer: but you will need to— nora: yes, indeed i shall, torvald. but i can't get on a bit without you to me; i have absolutely forgotten the whole thing. helmer: oh, we will soon work it up again. nora: yes, me, torvald. promise that you will! i am so nervous about it—all the people—. you must give yourself up to me entirely this evening. not the tiniest bit of business—you mustn't even take a pen in your hand. will you promise, torvald dear? helmer: i promise. this evening i will be wholly and absolutely at your service, you little mortal. ah, by the way, first of all i will just— [goes towards the hall door.] nora: what are you going to do there? helmer: only see if any letters have come. nora: no, no! don't do that, torvald! helmer: why not? nora: torvald, don't. there is nothing there. how does ibsen use dramatic irony to create suspense in this passage? rank says that he thought nora would be dressed up, while helmer says that he did not expect her to be. nora tells helmer that there are no letters in the box, while the audience knows that there is a letter from krogstad. nora says that no one can see her in her costume until the party, where she will dance the tarantella. helmer and rank promise to nora practice dancing, because she has not been practicing all day.
Answers: 1
Предмет
English, 26.10.2019 06:43, kidkoolaidboy96291
Read the excerpt from act 2 of a doll's house. helmer: rank led me to expect a splendid transformation. rank: [in the doorway] i understood so, but evidently i was mistaken. nora: yes, nobody is to have the chance of admiring me in my dress until tomorrow. helmer: but, my dear nora, you look so worn out. have you been practising too much? nora: no, i have not practised at all. helmer: but you will need to— nora: yes, indeed i shall, torvald. but i can't get on a bit without you to me; i have absolutely forgotten the whole thing. helmer: oh, we will soon work it up again. nora: yes, me, torvald. promise that you will! i am so nervous about it—all the people—. you must give yourself up to me entirely this evening. not the tiniest bit of business—you mustn't even take a pen in your hand. will you promise, torvald dear? helmer: i promise. this evening i will be wholly and absolutely at your service, you little mortal. ah, by the way, first of all i will just— [goes towards the hall door.] nora: what are you going to do there? helmer: only see if any letters have come. nora: no, no! don't do that, torvald! helmer: why not? nora: torvald, don't. there is nothing there. how does ibsen use dramatic irony to create suspense in this passage? rank says that he thought nora would be dressed up, while helmer says that he did not expect her to be. nora tells helmer that there are no letters in the box, while the audience knows that there is a letter from krogstad. nora says that no one can see her in her costume until the party, where she will dance the tarantella. helmer and rank promise to nora practice dancing, because she has not been practicing all day.
Answers: 1
Do you know the correct answer?
Read the excerpt from act 3 of a doll's house. helmer: how unreasonable and how ungrateful you are,...

Questions in other subjects: