Nevertheless the severance is rather casual and it drops a stain on our admiration of Nora. Ibsen has put the leaving of her children on the same moral and emotional level as the leaving of her husband and we cannot, in our hearts, asssent to that. It is not only the leaving but the way the play does not have time for suffering, changes of heart. Ibsen has been too much a man in the end. He has taken the man's practice, if not his stated belief, that where self-realization is concerned children shall not be an impediment. Elizabeth Hardwick
About This Quote

A quote from "The Master Builder" by Henrik Ibsen. Nora leaves her children to live with her lover, the actor, but the two are unable to be happy together. When Nora returns home, she goes through her past and realizes that she has been living a lie of pretending that her children are not important to her.

Source: Seduction And Betrayal: Women And Literature

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