When We Dead Awaken

When We Dead Awaken
Author: Henrik Ibsen
Publisher: CreateSpace
Total Pages: 68
Release: 2013-08-27
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781492268901

From Pillars of Society to John Gabriel Borkman, Ibsen's plays had followed each other at regular intervals of two years, save when his indignation over the abuse heaped upon Ghosts reduced to a single year the interval between that play and An Enemy of the People. John Gabriel Borkman having appeared in 1896, its successor was expected in 1898; but Christmas came and brought no rumour of a new play. In a man now over seventy, this breach of a long-established habit seemed ominous. The new National Theatre in Christiania was opened in September of the following year; and when I then met Ibsen (for the last time) he told me that he was actually at work on a new play, which he thought of calling a "Dramatic Epilogue." "He wrote When We Dead Awaken," says Dr. Elias, "with such labour and such passionate agitation, so spasmodically and so feverishly, that those around him were almost alarmed. He must get on with it, he must get on! He seemed to hear the beating of dark pinions over his head. He seemed to feel the grim Visitant, who had accompanied Alfred Allmers on the mountain paths, already standing behind him with uplifted hand. His relatives are firmly convinced that he knew quite clearly that this would be his last play, that he was to write no more. And soon the blow fell."

When We Dead Awaken

When We Dead Awaken
Author: Henrik Ibsen
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 70
Release: 2017-11-08
Genre:
ISBN: 9781979592413

Professor Arnold Rubek, a noted sculptor, and his young wife Maia return to their home on the coast of Norway after four years abroad. At the baths and the hotel they admit to being bored, and to break the summer tedium they plan to sail northward around the coast. Rubek becomes world-renowned with the fashioning of his masterpiece, "The Resurrection Day," and success brings him worldly riches. Other visitors at the baths are a sportsman named Ulfheim, called the bear-killer, and a strange pale woman, Madame von Satow, who, with a companion dressed in black, takes the nearby pavilion for the summer. As Rubek and Ulfheim converse, the dark Sister passes from the pavilion to the hotel, and Ulfheim says her passing is a portent of death. Maia accepts his invitation to see his sledge dogs fed, but Rubek remains seated on the lawn. The lady in white emerges from the pavilion. Rubek feels strangely drawn to her. Years before, he wanted to create a sculpture that would represent Woman awakening from the dead on the Resurrection Day after the sleep of death. After he found Irene, he saw in her the perfect model for his composition, and she became his great inspiration.