Love's Comedy

audiobook

Love's Comedy

by Henrik Ibsen

EN·~2 hours·7 chapters

Chapters

7 total

LOVE'S COMEDY

0:07

INTRODUCTION*

8:41

LOVE'S COMEDY - PERSONS OF THE COMEDY

0:27

SCENE—Mrs. Halm's Villa on the Drammensvejen at Christiania. - LOVE'S COMEDY - PLAY IN THREE ACTS - ACT FIRST

55:57

ACT SECOND

0:13

CHORUS.

40:35

ACT THIRD.

50:27

Description

A witty yet incisive portrait of mid‑nineteenth‑century Norwegian society, this play turns the genteel world of drawing‑room engagements into a lively laboratory for examining love, ambition and convention. Through sharp dialogue and a cast of familiar figures—proud aunts, ambitious mothers, a bemused clergyman, and a pair of hopeful betrothed—the drama exposes the hollow rituals that surround courtship, revealing how familiarity can erode the very spark it once celebrated. Ibsen’s humor is razor‑thin, making the audience laugh even as he unmasks the pretensions of “respectability” that dominate the social scene.

Beneath the comedy lies a deeper philosophical clash: an idealist who sees love as a fleeting, aspirational fire, and a critic who warns that blind passion can sabotage the practical institution of marriage. The work invites listeners to question whether a marriage built on convenience can survive longer than one founded on romantic fervor, and to consider how societal expectations shape personal choices. By the end of the first act, the characters stand at the crossroads of desire and duty, setting the stage for a compelling exploration of what truly sustains a partnership.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (150K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2006-06-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Henrik Ibsen

Henrik Ibsen

1828–1906

One of the great dramatists of the 19th century, this Norwegian writer helped reshape theater with plays that brought ordinary lives, moral conflict, and social pressure to the center of the stage. His work still feels strikingly modern, especially in classics like A Doll’s House, Ghosts, and Hedda Gabler.

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