This adage appeared when Hida put his father's pistol in the living room of the house. When she saw Braque judge approaching, she scared him by pretending to shoot at him. Her speech was fluent as she is pretending to shoot him, but he actually joked to scare him. As he told her to carefully remove the pistol from her, Brak 's reaction appeared smoothly. The speech number is clear. She will have this saying when Braque asks if she has options other than to play with a gun.
Title: Header · Gabelle Author: Henrik Ibsen Background: Period of an unknown city in Norway (probably the capital of Christiania - Norway, then): 1890 hero Header · Gabrel - (Marriage name: HEDDA Tesman) General nobility girl her I burned down. She is accustomed to a luxurious life, where she gets all she wants. She is tired of her own life. She got married to George Tessman, so she would not be a strange person in society. - Literary Review of "Rabbit Run" by John Updike John Updike 's novel "Rabbit, Run" tells the person Harry "Rabbit". The rabbit is a man without a brain whose career at the high school basketball star peaked at the age of 18. With the eyes of his wife, he had already gone downhill before an early married marriage. When he was 22 years old and was working as a salesman at a local department store, we met him for the first time in this novel.
In his theater "Hayda Gamble", Henrik Ibsen depicts the microcosm of the Norwegian society of the 19th century. The hero Haida shows a mixture of male and female qualities for her unique education at General Gabriel and social customs imposed on her. But this society worships General Gabriel because of his military position but his daughter Haida will not be tolerated as she does not accept the accepted sexual stereotypes. Jeddah and Jogan Tessman's gender reverse marriage, her power aspiration, and the use of General Gabler Pistol can not be accepted in her society and the theme "Do not do such a thing". Mentioned in the play and detailed about the death of Hedda but this suggests that uncertain positions between the gender roles of men and women in Hedda and their related features are unbearable by her society There.