Love's Comedy, by Henrik Ibsen, 
Translated by 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Love's Comedy, by Henrik Ibsen, 
Translated by C. H. Hereford 
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Title: Love's Comedy 
Author: Henrik Ibsen 
 
Release Date: June 22, 2006 [eBook #18657] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVE'S 
COMEDY*** 
E-text prepared by Douglas Levy 
 
The Collected Works of Henrik Ibsen, Volume I
LOVE'S COMEDY 
Translation by C. H. Hereford 
 
INTRODUCTION* 
Koerlighedens Komedie was published at Christiania in 1862. The 
polite world--so far as such a thing existed at the time in the Northern 
capital--received it with an outburst of indignation now entirely easy to 
understand. It has indeed faults enough. The character-drawing is often 
crude, the action, though full of effective by-play, extremely slight, and 
the sensational climax has little relation to human nature as exhibited in 
Norway, or out of it, at that or any other time. But the sting lay in the 
unflattering veracity of the piece as a whole; in the merciless portrayal 
of the trivialities of persons, or classes, high in their own esteem; in the 
unexampled effrontery of bringing a clergyman upon the stage. All 
these have long since passed in Scandinavia, into the category of the 
things which people take with their Ibsen as a matter of course, and the 
play is welcomed with delight by every Scandinavian audience. But in 
1862 the matter was serious, and Ibsen meant it to be so. 
For they were years of ferment--those six or seven which intervened 
between his return to Christiania from Bergen in 1857, and his 
departure for Italy in 1864. As director of the newly founded 
"Norwegian Theatre," Ibsen was a prominent member of the little knot 
of brilliant young writers who led the nationalist revolt against Danish 
literary tradition, then still dominant in well-to-do, and especially in 
official Christiania. Well-to-do and official Christiania met the revolt 
with contempt. Under such conditions, the specific literary battle of the 
Norwegian with the Dane easily developed into the eternal warfare of 
youthful idealism with "respectability" and convention. Ibsen had 
already started work upon the greatest of his Norse Histories--The 
Pretenders. But history was for him little more than material for the 
illustration of modern problems; and he turned with zest from the task 
of breathing his own spirit into the stubborn mould of the thirteenth 
century, to hold up the satiric mirror to the suburban drawing-rooms of
Christiania, and to the varied phenomena current there,--and in 
suburban drawing-rooms elsewhere,--under the name of Love. 
Yet Love's Comedy is much more than a satire, and its exuberant 
humour has a bitter core; the laughter that rings through it is the harsh, 
implacable laughter of Carlyle. His criticism of commonplace 
love-making is at first sight harmless and ordinary enough. The 
ceremonial formalities of the continental Verlobung, the shrill raptures 
of aunts and cousins over the engaged pair, the satisfied smile of 
enterprising mater-familias as she reckons up the tale of daughters or of 
nieces safely married off under her auspices; or, again, the 
embarrassments incident to a prolonged Brautstand following a hasty 
wooing, the deadly effect of familiarity upon a shallow affection, and 
the anxious efforts to save the appearance of romance when its zest has 
departed--all these things had yielded such "comedy" as they possess to 
many others before Ibsen, and an Ibsen was not needed to evoke it. But 
if we ask what, then, is the right way from which these "cosmic" 
personages in their several fashions diverge; what is the condition 
which will secure courtship from ridicule, and marriage from 
disillusion, Ibsen abruptly parts company with all his predecessors. "'Of 
course,' reply the rest in chorus, 'a deep and sincere love';-- 'together,' 
add some, 'with prudent good sense.'" The prudent good sense Ibsen 
allows; but he couples with it the startling paradox that the first 
condition of a happy marriage is the absence of love, and the first 
condition of an enduring love is the absence of marriage. 
The student of the latter-day Ibsen is naturally somewhat taken aback to 
find the grim poet of Doubt, whose task it seems to be to apply a 
corrosive criticism to modern institutions in general and to marriage in 
particular, gravely defending the "marriage of convenience." And his 
amazement is not diminished by the sense that the author of this plea 
for the loveless marriage, which poets have at all times scorned and 
derided, was himself beyond question happily, married. The truth is 
that there are two men in Ibsen--an idealist, exalted    
    
		
	
	
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