The Master Builder by Henrik Ibsen
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page 4 of 315 (01%)
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This is the latest piece of Ibsen's verse that has been given to the
world; but one of his earliest poems--first printed in 1858--was also, in some sort, a prelude to _The Master Builder_. Of this a literal translation may suffice. It is called BUILDING-PLANS I remember as clearly as if it had been to-day the evening when, in the paper, I saw my first poem in print. There I sat in my den, and, with long-drawn puffs, I smoked and I dreamed in blissful self-complacency. "I will build a cloud-castle. It shall shine all over the North. It shall have two wings: one little and one great. The great wing shall shelter a deathless poet; the little wing shall serve as a young girl's bower." The plan seemed to me nobly harmonious; but as time went on it fell into confusion. When the master grew reasonable, the castle turned utterly crazy; the great wing became too little, the little wing fell to ruin. Thus we see that, thirty-five years before the date of _The Master Builder_, Ibsen's imagination was preoccupied with a symbol of a master building a castle in the air, and a young girl in one of its towers. There has been some competition among the poet's young lady friends |
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