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"A case of Reflection"

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posted on May, 12 2013 @ 10:32 PM
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"A case of Reflection"

Once a man reaches a certain age, he reflects on the way he has lived and decides whether or not he has fulfilled his design in existence. His reflections deal with a group of ideas that are formulated in his mind. Henrik Ibsens play, "Peer Gynt", is a perfect example of this thought, the play brings into focus four main characters which serve to prove that the play is a complicated cogitation in the mind of Peer.
The first figure in the play, the button moulder, adds to this theory. He is a messenger of death sent by the master to collect all unformed, characterless souls, to be reformed and eventually recast. The button moulder is a good example. He is used, in the play, to show the undefined nature of those that fail to make commitments throughout their lives.
In scene VIII, Peer Gynt meets an old man, the king of the trolls, who within this characterization is also his father-in-law. Peer tells him of his need for a voucher because he is accused of being unformed and characterless and that he does not have any desire to be thrown into the casting ladle. But the old man rejects his plea and refuses to lie for him. The memory of his deserted daughter proves to him that Peer Gynt has lived and followed the motto of the Troll: "Troll! to thyself be enough!"
Henrik Ibsen use of the characters, the Lean one and the Master, show again that the play is only an old mans complicated way of reflection. The characters show extremes from natural to unnatural. The natural way of being that of the master, God, who wants us to define our lives through commitments. The unnatural, which is more apparent, is represented by the Lean One, the devil, who expects us to defy what's right and natural and to do what ever one feels.
Peer Gynt, in the play, shows that he has defied both natural and unnatural ways of life to take an existence some where in between both. Each scene in the play shows an old man on the verge of death, still unwilling to make commitments. Al-though only a play, it shows the necessity for commitments in our lives and establishes that with out them the days become abstract and unfulfilled.
The four main characters, which I have described in earlier paragraphs, are descriptive of the thoughts and feelings that Peer Gynt has towards himself. Each figure shows the complex way the human mind finds models to represent thoughts and ideas. The characters themselves are the best evidence that the play is only an act of reflection in the mind of Peer Gynt, besides being an effective use by Henrik Ibsen of an allegory to project his views.



posted on May, 12 2013 @ 11:55 PM
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reply to post by jvarga390
 


varga.
What a wonderful review, if is your writing all the more so, if not it should be noted. I have found a case for the truthfulness of these thoughts in my own life. I think it to be that the commitments we make distinguish us from the otherwise general energy patterns of this existence.i think that we can make commitments that are long term and commitments that are short term. i don't think that our commitments need to remain the same, though they might if this is ones desire. i think we may switch commitments from one thing to another just so long as we understand the reason for the change and maintain our "commitment stability" with in the energy matrix.



posted on May, 13 2013 @ 09:14 PM
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It was for a philosophy class decades ago but I posted any way. Maybe some one can use it or ideas in their writtings.



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