by Professor
Bjorn Hemmer, professor at the University of Oslo
Introduction
Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906) published his last
drama, "When We Dead Awaken", in 1899, and he called it a dramatic
epilogue. It was also destined to be the epilogue of his life's work, because
illness prevented him from writing more. For half of a century he had devoted
his life and his energies to the art of drama, and he had won international
acclaim as the greatest and most influential dramatist of his time. He knew that
he had gone further than anyone in putting Norway on the map.
Henrik Ibsen was also a major poet, and he
published a collection of poems in 1871. However, drama was the focus of his
real lyrical spirit. For a period of many hard years, he faced bitter opposition.
But he finally triumphed over the conservatism and aesthetic prejudices of the
contemporary critics and audiences. More than anyone, he gave theatrical art a
new vitality by bringing into European bourgeois drama an ethical gravity, a
psychological depth, and a social significance which the theater had lacked
since the days of Shakespeare. In this manner, Ibsen strongly contributed to
giving European drama a vitality and artistic quality comparable to the ancient
Greek tragedies.
It is from this perspective we view his
contribution to theatrical history. His realistic contemporary drama was a
continuation of the European tradition of tragic plays. In these works he
portrays people from the middle class of his day. These are people whose routines
are suddenly upset as they are confronted with a deep crisis in their lives.
They have been blindly following a way of life leading to the troubles and are
themselves responsible for the crisis. Looking back on their lives, they are
forced to confront themselves. However, Ibsen created another type of drama as
well. In fact, he had been writing for 25 years before he, in 1877, created his
first contemporary drama, "Pillars of Society".
Life and Writing
Ibsen's biography is lacking in grand and
momentous episodes. His life as an artist can be seen as a singularly long and
hard struggle leading to victory and fame - a hard road from poverty to
international success. He spent all of 27 years abroad, in Italy and Germany.
He left his land of birth at the age of 36 in 1864. It was not until he was 63
that he moved home again, to Kristiania (now Oslo), where he would die in 1906
at the age of 78.
In lbsen's last drama, "When We Dead
Awaken", he describes the life of an artist that in many ways reflects on
his own. The world renowned sculptor, Professor Rubek, has returned to Norway
after many years abroad, and in spite of his fame and success, he feels no
happiness. In the central work of his life, he has modeled a self-portrait
titled "Remorse for a ruined life" During the play he is forced to
admit that he has taken the pleasure out of his own life as well as spoiling
others'. Everything has been sacrificed for his art - he has forsaken the love
of his youth and his earlier idealism as well. It follows that he has actually
betrayed his art by relinquishing these essentials. It is none other than his
old flame Irene, the model who posed for him in his youth, who goes to him in
his moment of destiny and tells him the truth: it is first when we dead awaken,
that we see what is irremediable that we have never really lived.
It is the tragic life feeling itself that gives
Ibsen's drama its special character, the experience of missing out on life and
plodding along in a state of living death. The alternative is pictured as a
utopian existence in freedom, truth and love - in short - a happy life. In
Ibsen's world the main character strives toward a goal, but this struggle leads
out into the cold, to loneliness. Yet the possibility of opting for another
route is always there, one can chose human warmth and contact. The problem for
Ibsen's protagonist is that both choices can appear to be good, and the
individual does not see the consequences of the decision.
In "When We Dead Awaken" the chill of
art is contrasted with life's warmth. In this perspective, art serves as a
prison from which the artist neither can, nor wishes to escape. As Rubek says
to Irene:
"I am an artist, Irene, and I take no
shame to myself for the frailties that perhaps cling to me. For I was born to
be an artist, you see. - And, do what I may, I shall never be anything
else."
This is not an acceptable excuse for Irene,
whom he has betrayed. She sees things from a different angle. She calls him a
"poet", one who creates his own fictitious world, neglecting his
humanity and that of the people who love him. Ella Rentheim, in "John
Gabriel Borkman" (1896) makes the same complaint against the man who
sacrificed her on the altar of his career. The tragic element in Ibsen's
perspective is that for the type of people that concern him, this seems to be
an insoluble conflict. Yet this fact does not exonerate them from the
responsibility or their own decisions.
Although "When We Dead Awaken"
criticizes the egocentricity of the artist, it would be going too far to view
the drama as the writer's bitter self-examination. Rubek is not a
self-portrait. However, some Ibsen researchers have seen him as a spokesman for
the author's standpoint on the question of art. At one point, Rubek says that
the public only relates to the external realistic "truth" in his
human portrayal. What people do not understand is the hidden dimension in these
portraits, all the deceitful motives that hide behind the respectable bourgeois
facades. In his youth, Rubek had been inspired by an idealistic vision of a
higher form of human existence. Experience has turned him into a disillusioned
exposer of people, a man who believes he portrays life as it really is. It is
the animal governing man that dominates his vision; this is Rubek's version of
Zola's "La béte humaine", and he explains the changes in his art in
the following way:
"I imagined that which I saw with my eyes
around me in the world. I had to include it (...) and up from the fissures of
the soil there now swarm men and women with dimly- suggested animal-faces.
women and men - as I knew them in real life."
Understandably, some students of Ibsen have
fallen into the temptation of drawing a parallel between life and art, and see
this work as a merciless self-denunciation. Once again, "When We Dead
Awaken" is by no means auto-biographical. Rubek's relationship with the
writer has to be sought on a deeper level - in the conflicts that Ibsen, toward
the end of his life, saw as a general and essential human problem.
Ibsen the Psychologist
In the work of the aging writer we meet a
number of people who are experiencing similar conflicts. John Gabriel Borkman
sacrifices his love for a dream of power and honor. Master builder Solness
wrecks his family's lives in order to be regarded as an "artist" in
his trade. And Hedda Gabler resolutely changes the fates of others in order to
fulfill her own dream of freedom and independence. These examples of people who
pursue their own goals, involuntarily trampling on the lives of others, are all
drawn from the playwright's last decade of writing. In Ibsen's psychological
analyses, he reveals the negative forces (he calls them "demons" and
"trolls" in the minds of these people. His human characterization in
these latter dramas is extremely complex - a common factor shared by all his
last works, starting with "The Wild Duck" in 1884. In his last 15
years of writing, Ibsen developed his dialectical supremacy and his distinctive
dramatic form - where realism, symbolism, and deep-digging psychological
insights interact. It is this phase of his work that has prompted people to
call him - rightly or wrongly - a "Freud of the theater." In any
case, Freud and many other psychologists have made use of Ibsen's human
portraits as a basis for character analysis or even to illustrate their own
theories. Especially well known is Freud's analysis of Rebekka West in
"Rosmersholm" (1886), a portrayal he discussed in 1916 together with
other character types "who collapse under the weight of success."
Freud sees Rebekka as a tragic victim of the Oedipus complex and an incestuous
past. The analysis reveals perhaps more about Freud than about Ibsen. But
Freud's influence, and the sway of psychoanalysis in general, have had a
considerable effect on the way the Norwegian dramatist has been regarded.
Interest in Ibsen as a psychologist can too readily
obscure other, equally important, sides of his art. His account of human life
is from an acute social and conceptual perspective. Perhaps this is the essence
of his art - that which turns it into existential drama exploring many facets
of life. This concerns everything he wrote, even prior to his emergence as an
international dramatist around 1880.
A Desperate Drama
Ibsen's work as a writer represents a long
poetic contemplation of people's need to live differently than they do. Thus
there is always a deep undercurrent of desperation in his work. Benedetto Croce
called these portrayals of people who live in constant expectation and who are
consumed by their pursuit of "something else" in life, "a
desperate drama".
It is precisely this distance between what they
can achieve and what they want to achieve that is the cause of the tragic (and
in many cases the comic) aspect of these people's lives. Ibsen felt that this
contradiction between will and real prospects was at the root of his art.
Looking back on 25 years of writing in 1875, he declared that most of what he
had written involved "the contradiction between ability and aspiration,
between will and possibility". In this conflict he saw "humanity's
and the individual's tragedy and comedy simultaneously." - A decade later,
he created the tragicomic constellation of the priest Rosmer and his scruffy
teacher Ulrik Brendel. These two men, who are reflections of each other, both
end up on the brink of an abyss where all they see is life's total emptiness and
insignificance.
In Ibsen's 12 modern contemporary plays, from
"Pillars of Society" (1877) to "When We Dead Awaken"
(1899), we are led time and again into the same milieu. His characters' are
distinguished by their staunch, well-established bourgeois lives. Nevertheless,
their world is threatened and threatening. It turns out that the world is in
motion; old values and previous conceptions are adrift. The movement shakes up
the life of the individual and jeopardizes the established social order. Here we
see how the process has a psychological as well as a conceptual and social
aspect. Yet what starts the whole process is the need for change, something
springing forth from the individual's volition.
In this sense, Ibsen is a powerful conceptual
writer. This does not mean that his main concern as a dramatist was the
didactical use of theater, or the waging of an abstract ideological debate.
(Some of his critics, contemporary and later, have made this accusation - and
it's fairly obvious that Ibsen was drawn towards the didactic.) However, the
basis of Ibsen's human portrayal is his characters' conceptions of what makes
life worth living - their values and their understanding of existence. The
concepts they use to describe their position may be unclear; their
self-understanding may be intuitive and deficient. A good example of this is
Ellida Wangel's description of her ambivalent attraction to the sea in
"The Lady from the Sea" (1888). But for a long time, in Ellida's
consciousness, a desire has grown for a freer life coupled with a need for
other moral and social values than those dominating Dr. Wangel's bourgeois
existence. And this discovery within her creates shockwaves on the
psychological and the social plane.
"The Human Conflicts"
Ibsen himself has given the best characteristic
of his approach to drama. This was as early as 1857 in a theater review:
"It is not the conscious strife between
ideas parading before us, nor is this the situation in real life. What we see
are human conflicts, and enwrapped in these, deep inside, lay ideas at battle -
being defeated, or charged with victory."
This undoubtedly touches upon something
essential in Ibsen's demands to dramatic art: it should as realistically as
possible unify three elements: the psychological, the ideological and the
social. At its best, the organic synthesis of these three elements is at the
heart of Ibsen's drama. Perhaps he only succeeds completely in a few of his
plays, such as "Ghosts", "The Wild Duck", and "Hedda Gabler".
Interestingly, he considered his major work to be "Emperor and
Galilean" (1873), contrary to everyone else. This could indicate how much
emphasis he put on ideology, not overt, but as a conflict between opposing
views toward life. Ibsen believed that he had created a fully "realistic"
rendering of the inner conflict in the abandoned Julian. The truth is, however,
that Julian is too marked by the dramatist's own thoughts - what he calls his
"positive philosophy of life." Ibsen first succeeded as a theatrical
writer when he seriously took another approach - the one he described in
connection with "Hedda Gabler" (1890):
"My main goal has been to depict people,
human moods and human fates, on the basis of certain predominant social
conditions and perceptions."
Ibsen took many years, after "Emperor and
Galilean", to orient himself in this direction. Five years after that
great historical dramatization of ideas came "Pillars of Society",
the starting point for lbsen's reputation as a European theatrical writer.
Ibsen's International Breakthrough
In 1879, Ibsen sent Nora Helmer out into the
world with a demand that a woman too must have the freedom to develop as an
adult, independent, and responsible person. The playwright was now over 50, and
had finally been recognized outside of the Nordic countries. "Pillars of
Society". had admittedly opened the German borders for him, but it was
"A Doll's House". and "Ghost" (1881) which in the 1880s led
him into the European avant-garde.
"A Doll's House" has a plot which he
repeated in many subsequent works, in the phase when he cultivated
"critical realism". We experience the individual in opposition to the
majority, society's oppressive authority. Nora puts it this way: "I will
have to find out who is right, society or myself".
As noted earlier, when the individual
intellectually frees himself from traditional ways of thinking, serious
conflicts arise. For a short period around 1880, it appears that Ibsen was
relatively optimistic about the individual's chances of succeeding on his own. Although
her future is insecure in many ways, Nora seems to have a real chance of
finding the freedom and independence she is seeking. Ibsen can be criticized
for his somewhat superficial treatment of the problems a divorced woman without
means would face in contemporary society. But it was the moral problems that
concerned him as a writer, not the practical and economic ones.
A Singular Success
In spite of Nora's uncertain future prospects,
she has served in a number of countries as a symbol for women fighting for
liberation and equality. In this connection, she is the most
"international" of lbsen's characters. Yet this is a rather singular
success. The middle-class public has enthusiastically applauded a woman who
leaves her children and husband, completely breaking off with the most
important institution in the bourgeois society - the family!
This points to the basis of Ibsen's
international success. He took deep schisms and acute problems that afflicted
the bourgeois family and placed them on the stage. On the surface, the
middle-class homes gave an impression of success - and appeared to reflect a
picture of a healthy and stable society. But Ibsen dramatizes the hidden
conflicts in this society by opening the doors to the private, and secret rooms
of the bourgeois homes. He shows what can be hiding behind the beautiful
façades: moral duplicity, confinement, betrayal, and fraud not to mention a
constant insecurity. These were the aspects of the middle-class life one was
not supposed to mention in public, as Pastor Manders wished Mrs. Alving to keep
secret her reading and everything else that threatened the atmosphere at
Rosenvold in "Ghosts". In the same manner, the social leaders in
"Rosmersholm" put pressure on Rosmer to keep him from telling that
he, the priest, had given up the Christian faith.
But Ibsen did not remain silent, and the
spotlights of his plays made contemporary aspects of life highly visible. He
disrupted the peace of the lives of the bourgeoisie by reminding them that they
had climbed to their position of social power by mastering quite different
ideals than tranquillity, order and stability. The bourgeoisie had betrayed its
own motto of "freedom, equality, and brotherhood", and especially
after the revolutionary year 1848 they had become defenders of the status quo.
There was, of course, a liberal opposition within their class, and Ibsen openly
joins these ranks in his first modern contemporary drama. He considered this
movement for freedom and progress to be the true "European" point of
view. As early as 1870, he wrote to the Danish critic Georg Brandes that it was
imperative to return to the ideas of the French revolution, freedom, equality,
and brotherhood. The words need a new meaning in keeping with the times, he
claimed. In 1875 he writes, again to Brandes:
"Why are you, and the rest of us who hold
the European viewpoint, so isolated at home?"
Eventually, as Ibsen grew older, he had trouble
accepting certain extreme forms of liberalism which overemphasized the
individual's sovereign right to self-realization and to some extent radically
departed from past norms and values. In "Rosmersholm", he points out
the dangers of radicalism built solely on individual moral norms. It is obvious
here that Ibsen is concerned with European culture's basis in a Christian
inspired moral tradition. One has to build on this, he indicates, even though
one has given up the Christian faith. This is certainly the conclusion that
Rebekka West reaches.
Simultaneously, this drama, like
"Ghosts", is a painful clash with the melancholic, killjoy aspects of
the Christian bourgeois tradition which subdues the human spirit. Both these
works contain, for all their despair, a warm defense of happiness and the joy
of life - pitted against the bourgeois society's emphasis on duty, law, and
order.
It was in the 1870s that Ibsen oriented himself
toward his "European" point of view. Even though he lived abroad, he
continually chose a Norwegian setting for his contemporary dramas. As a rule,
we find ourselves in a small Norwegian coastal town, the kind Ibsen knew so
well from his childhood in Skien and his youth in Grimstad. The background of
the young Ibsen certainly gave him a sharp eye for social forces and conflicts
arising from differing viewpoints. In small societies, such as the typical
Norwegian coastal town, these social and ideological conflicts are more exposed
than they would be in a larger city.
Ibsen's first painful experiences came from
such a small community. He had seen how conventions, traditions, and norms
could exercise a negative control over the individual, create anxiety, and
inhibit a natural and joyful lifestyle. This is the atmosphere of the
"ghosts" as Mrs. Alving experiences it. According to her, it makes
people "afraid of the light."
This was the atmosphere of his youth that
formed the basis for his writing and world fame. As an insecure writer and man
of the theater in a stifling Norwegian milieu, he set out to create a new
Norwegian drama. He began with this national perspective. At the same time,
from his first journey abroad, he oriented himself toward the European
tradition of theater.
lbsen's Years of Learning
In the history of drama, early in the 1850s
Ibsen carried on the traditions of two highly dissimilar writers, the Frenchman
Eugéne Scribe (1791-1861) and the German Friedrich Hebbel (1813-63). For 11
years the young Ibsen was occupied with day to day practical stagework, and it
follows that he had to keep himself well informed about the latest contemporary
Euro-heatrical art. He worked with rehearsals of new plays and was committed to
writing for the theater.
Scribe could teach him how a drama's plot should
be structured in a logically motivated progression of scenes. Hebbel provided
him with an example of the way drama could be based on life's contemporary
dialectics, creating a modern conceptual drama. Hebbel's pioneering work was
his conveyance of the ideologicalconflicts of his day into the theater where he
created "a drama of issues" pointing forward. He also knew how the
Greek tragedy's retrospective technique could be used by a modern dramatist.
In other words, Ibsen was in close contact with
the art of the stage for a long uninterrupted period. His six years at the
theater in Bergen (1851-57) and the following four or five years at the theater
in Kristiania from 1857 were not easy. But he acquired a sharp eye for
theatrical techniques and possibilities.
During a study tour to Copenhagen and Dresden
in 1852, he came across a dramaturgical work newly released in Germany. It was
Hermann Hettner's "Das moderne Drama" (1852). This programmatic
treatise for a new topical theater deeply affected Ibsen's development as a
dramatist. In Hettner too, we see the strong influence of Scribe and Hebbel,
combined with a passionate interest for Shakespeare. Ibsen also gleaned
knowledge from other writers, most notably Schiller and the two Danes Adam
Oehlenschleger (1779-1850) and John Ludvig Heiberg (1791-1860).
Ibsen's apprenticeship was long, lasting about
15 years, and included theater work he later would claim to be as difficult as
"having an abortion every day." There was a strong pressure to
produce hanging over him; one that led to fumbling attempts in many directions.
He experienced a few minor artistic victories - and numerous defeats. Very few
believed that he had the necessary gift to become more than a minor theatrical
writer with a modicum of talent.
In spite of this insecurity, it is a determined
young writer we see during these years. His goal was clearly national. Together
with his friend and colleague Bjornstjerne Bjornson (1832-1910), he founded
"The Norwegian Company" in 1859, an organ for Norwegian art and
culture. They had a joint program for their activities. Ibsen was especially
concerned with the role of theater in the young Norwegian nation's search for
its own identity In these "nation-building" pursuits, he gathered his
material from the country's medieval history and perfected his art as a
dramatist. This is prominent in the work that caps Ibsen's period of
apprenticeship, "The Pretenders" from 1863. The story takes place in
Norway in the 1200s, a period marked by destructive strife. But Ibsen's
perspective is Norway of the 1860s when he has the king, Haakon Haakonsson,
express his thoughts on national unity:
"Norway was a kingdom, now it will be a
nation (... ) all shall be as one hereafter, and all shall know in themselves
that they are one.!"
"The Pretenders" was Ibsen's
breakthrough, yet he had to wait a few years before being recognized as one of
the country's leading writers. This honor came in 1866 with "Brand"
"The Pretenders", constitutes the end of his close relationship with
Norwegian theater. It was also his farewell performance - he now started his
long exile. In the years that followed, he turned away from the stage and
sought a reading public.
The Great Topical Dramas
Both the great dramas for reading,
"Brand" (1866) and "Peer Gynt" (1867), were based on
Ibsen's problematic relationship with his country of birth. Political
developments in 1864 led him to lose his optimistic belief in his country's
future. He even began to doubt whether his countrymen had a historical raison
d'être as a nation.
What he had earlier treated as a national
problem of identity now became a question of the individual's personal
integrity. It was no longer sufficient to dwell on an earlier historical era of
greatness and focus on the continuity of the nation's life. Ibsen turned away
from history, and confronted what he considered the main contemporary problem -
a nation can only rise up culturally by means of the individual's exertion of
will. "Brand" is mainly a drama with a message that the individual
must follow the path of volition in order to achieve true humanity In addition,
this is the only way to real freedom - for the individual, and it follows, for
society as a whole.
In the two rather different twin works
"Brand" and "Peer Gynt", the focus is on the problem of
personality, Ibsen dramatizes the conflict between an opportunistic acting out
of an unnatural role, and a dedication to a demanding lifelong quest. In
"Peer Gynt", the dramatist created a scene which artistically
illustrates this situation of conflict. The aging Peer, on his way back to his
Norwegian roots is forced to come to terms with himself. As he looks back upon
his wasted life, he peels an onion. He lets each layer represent a different
role he has played. But he finds no core. He has to face the fact that he has
become "no one", that he has no "self".
"So unspeakably poor, then, a soul can go
back to nothingness, in the misty gray. You beautiful earth, don't be annoyed
that I left no sign when I walked your grass. You beautiful sun, in vain you've
shed your glorious light on an empty house. There was no one within to cheer
and warm; - The owner, they tell me, was never at home."
Peer is the weak, spineless person - Brand's
antithesis. But it is precisely in Ibsen's living portrayal of a personality's
"dissolution" in changing roles, that some historians of the theater
see the harbinger of a modernistic perception of the individual. The British
drama researcher Ronald Gaskell puts it this way: "Peer Gynt" inaugurates
the drama of the modern mind", and he continues: "Indeed, if
Surrealism and Expressionism in the theater can be said to have any single
source, the source is undoubtedly "Peer Gynt".
Thus does this early Ibsen drama though very
"Norwegian" and romantic claim a central position in theatrical
history, even though it was not written for the stage. In fact, it is
"Peer Gynt" that in modern times has helped Ibsen to retain his
position as a vital and relevant writer. Thus it was not only his contemporary
plays that have made him one of the most towering figures in the history of the
theater. Although it was mainly these works the well-known Swedish researcher
in drama, Martin Lamm, had in mind when he claimed:
"Ibsen's drama is the Rome of modern
drama: all roads lead to it - and from it."
Even though Ibsen withdrew from his Norwegian
starting point in the 1870s and became "a European," he was always
deeply marked by the country he left in 1864, and to which he first returned as
an aging celebrity. It was not easy for him to return. The many years abroad,
and the long struggle for recognition, had left their indelible stamp. Towards
the end of his career, he said that he really was not happy with the fantastic
life he had lived. He felt homeless - even in his mother country.
But it is precisely this tension between the
Norwegian and the foreign (an element of freer European culture) in Ibsen that
characterized him more than anything else as an individual and a writer. His
independent position in what he called "the great, free, cultural
situation" provided him with the broad perspective of distance, and
freedom. Simultaneously, the Norwegian in him created a longing for a more
liberated and happier life. This is the longing for the sun in the grave
writer's poetic world. He never denied his distinctive Norwegian character.
Toward the end of his life, he said to a German friend:
He who wishes to understand me, must know
Norway. The magnificent, but severe, natural environment surrounding people up
there in the north, the lonely, secluded life - the farms are miles apart -
forces them to be unconcerned with others, to keep to their own. That is why
they become introspective and serious, they brood and doubt - and they often
lose faith. At home every other person is a philosopher! There, the long, dark,
winters come with their thick fogs enveloping the houses - oh, how they long
for the sun!
Part II: Major
Works
“Only by grasping and comprehending my entire
production as a continuous and coherent whole will the reader be able to
receive the precise impression I sought to convey in the individual parts…I
therefore appeal to the reader that he not put any play aside, and not skip
anything, but that he absorb the plays…in the order in which I wrote them.”
Henrik Ibsen
1850 - Catiline
(Catilina)
1850 - The
Burial Mound also known as The Warrior's Barrow (Kjæmpehøjen)
1851 -
Norma (Norma)
1852 - St.
John's Eve (Sancthansnatten)
1854 - Lady
Inger of Oestraat (Fru Inger til Østeraad)
1855 - The
Feast at Solhaug (Gildet paa Solhoug)
1856 - Olaf
Liljekrans (Olaf Liljekrans)
1857 - The
Vikings at Helgeland (Hærmændene paa Helgeland)
1862 -
Digte - only released collection of poetry
1862 -
Love's Comedy (Kjærlighedens Komedie)
1863 - The
Pretenders (Kongs-Emnerne)
1866 - Brand
(Brand)
1867 - Peer
Gynt (Peer Gynt)
1869 - The
League of Youth (De unges Forbund)
1873 -
Emperor and Galilean (Kejser og Galilæer)
1877 -
Pillars of Society (Samfundets Støtter)
1879 - A
Doll House (Et Dukkehjem)
1881 -
Ghosts (Gengangere)
1882 - An
Enemy of the People (En Folkefiende)
1884 - The
Wild Duck (Vildanden)
1886 -
Rosmersholm (Rosmersholm)
1888 - The
Lady from the Sea (Fruen fra Havet)
1890 -
Hedda Gabler (Hedda Gabler)
1892 - The
Master Builder (Bygmester Solness)
1896 - John
Gabriel Borkman (John Gabriel Borkman)
1899 - When
We Dead Awaken (Når vi døde vaagner)
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