The Master Builder
The Master BuilderINTRODUCTIONTHE MASTER BUILDER.ACT FIRST.ACT SECOND.ACT THIRD.Copyright
The Master Builder
Henrik Ibsen
INTRODUCTION
WithThe Master Builder—orMaster Builder Solness, as the title runs in the original—we enter upon the final
stage in Ibsen's career. "You are essentially right," the poet
wrote to Count Prozor in March 1900, "when you say that the series
which closes with the Epilogue (When We Dead
Awaken) began withMaster
Builder Solness.""Ibsen," says Dr. Brahm, "wrote in Christiania all the four
works which he thus seems to bracket together—Solness,Eyolf,Borkman, andWhen We
Dead Awaken. He returned to Norway in July 1891,
for a stay of indefinite length; but the restless wanderer over
Europe was destined to leave his home no more.... He had not
returned, however, to throw himself, as of old, into the battle of
the passing day. Polemics are entirely absent from the poetry of
his old age. He leaves the State and Society at peace. He who had
departed as the creator of Falk [inLove's
Comedy] now, on his return, gazes into the
secret places of human nature and the wonder of his own
soul."Dr. Brahm, however, seems to be mistaken in thinking that
Ibsen returned to Norway with no definite intention of settling
down. Dr. Julius Elias (an excellent authority) reports that
shortly before Ibsen left Munich in 1891, he remarked one day, "I
must get back to the North!" "Is that a sudden impulse?" asked
Elias. "Oh no," was the reply; "I want to be a good head of a
household and have my affairs in order. To that end I must
consolidate may property, lay it down in good securities, and get
it under control—and that one can best do where one has rights of
citizenship." Some critics will no doubt be shocked to find the
poet whom they have written down an "anarchist" confessing such
bourgeois motives.After his return to Norway, Ibsen's correspondence became
very scant, and we have no letters dating from the period when he
was at work onThe Master Builder. On the other hand, we possess a curious lyrical prelude to
the play, which he put on paper on March 16, 1892. It is said to
have been his habit, before setting to work on a play, to
"crystallise in a poem the mood which then possessed him;" but the
following is the only one of these keynote poems which has been
published. I give it in the original language, with a literal
translation:DE SAD DER, DE TO—De sad der, de to, i saa lunt et
hus ved host og i
venterdage, Saa braendte huset. Alt ligger
i grus. De to faar i asken
rage. For nede id en er et smykke
gemt,— et smykke, som aldrig kan
braende. Og leder de trofast, haender det
nemt at det findes af ham eller
hende. Men finder de end, brandlidte
to, det dyre, ildfaste
smykke,— aldrig han finder sin braendte
tro, han aldrig sin braendte
lykke.THEY SAT THERE, THE TWO—They sat there, the two, in so cosy a house, through
autumn and winter days. Then the house burned
down. Everything lies in ruins. The two must grope among the
ashes. For among them is hidden a jewel—a jewel that never
can burn. And if they search faithfully, it may easily happen
that he or she may find it. But even should they find it, the burnt-out two—find
this precious unburnable jewel—never will she find her
burnt faith, he never his burnt happiness.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 toThe
Master Builder. Of this a literal translation
may suffice. It is called,BUILDING-PLANSI 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 ofThe 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 for the honour of having served as his model for Hilda.
Several, no doubt, are entitled to some share in it. One is not
surprised to learn that among the papers he left behind were
sheaves upon sheaves of letters from women. "All these ladies,"
says Dr. Julius Elias, "demanded something of him—some cure for
their agonies of soul, or for the incomprehension from which they
suffered; some solution of the riddle of their nature. Almost every
one of them regarded herself as a problem to which Ibsen could not
but have the time and the interest to apply himself. They all
thought they had a claim on the creator of Nora.... Of this chapter
of his experience, Fru Ibsen spoke with ironic humour. 'Ibsen (I
have often said to him), Ibsen, keep these swarms of over-strained
womenfolk at arm's length.' 'Oh no (he would reply), let them
alone. I want to observe them more closely.' His observations would
take a longer or shorter time as the case might be, and would
always contribute to some work of art."The principal model for Hilda was doubtless Fraulein Emilie
Bardach, of Vienna, whom he met at Gossensass in the autumn of
1889. He was then sixty-one years of age; she is said to have been
seventeen. As the lady herself handed his letters to Dr. Brandes
for publication, there can be no indiscretion in speaking of them
freely. Some passages from them I have quoted in the introduction
toHedda Gabler—passages which
show that at first the poet deliberately put aside his Gossensass
impressions for use when he should stand at a greater distance from
them, and meanwhile devoted himself to work in a totally different
key. On October 15, 1889, he writes, in his second letter to
Fraulein Bardach: "I cannot repress my summer memories, nor do I
want to. I live through my experiences again and again. To
transmute it all into a poem I find, in the meantime, impossible.
In the meantime? Shall I succeed in doing so some time in the
future? And do I really wish to succeed? In the meantime, at any
rate, I do not.... And yet it must come in time." The letters
number twelve in all, and are couched in a tone of sentimental
regret for the brief, bright summer days of their acquaintanceship.
The keynote is struck in the inscription on the back of a
photograph which he gave her before they parted:An die Maisonne eines Septemberlebens—in
Tirol,(1) 27/9/89. In her album he had written
the words:Hohes, schmerzliches
Gluck— um das Unerreichbare zu
ringen!(2)in which we may, if we like, see a foreshadowing of the
Solness frame of mind. In the fifth letter of the series he refers
to her as "an enigmatic Princess"; in the sixth he twice calls her
"my dear Princess"; but this is the only point at which the letters
quite definitely and unmistakably point forward toThe Master Builder. In the ninth
letter (February 6, 1890) he says: "I feel it a matter of
conscience to end, or at any rate, to restrict, our
correspondence." The tenth letter, six months later, is one of
kindly condolence on the death of the young lady's father. In the
eleventh (very short) note, dated December 30, 1890, he
acknowledges some small gift, but says: "Please, for the present,
do not write me again.... I will soon send you my new play [Hedda Gabler]. Receive it in
friendship, but in silence!" This injunction she apparently obeyed.
WhenThe Master Builderappeared, it would seem that Ibsen did not even send her a
copy of the play; and we gather that he was rather annoyed when she
sent him a photograph signed "Princess of Orangia." On his
seventieth birthday, however, she telegraphed her congratulations,
to which he returned a very cordial reply. And here their relations
ended.That she was right, however, in regarding herself as his
principal model for Hilda appears from an anecdote related by Dr.
Elias.(3) It is not an altogether pleasing anecdote, but Dr. Elias
is an unexceptionable witness, and it can by no means be omitted
from an examination into the origins ofThe Master
Builder. Ibsen had come to Berlin in February
1891 for the first performance ofHedda
Gabler. Such experiences were always a trial to
him, and he felt greatly relieved when they were over. Packing,
too, he detested; and Elias having helped him through this terrible
ordeal, the two sat down to lunch together, while awaiting the
train. An expansive mood descended upon Ibsen, and chuckling over
his champagne glass, he said: "Do you know, my next play is already
hovering before me—of course in vague outline. But of one thing I
have got firm hold. An experience: a woman's figure. Very
interesting, very interesting indeed. Again a spice of the devilry
in it." Then he related how he had met in the Tyrol a Viennese girl
of very remarkable character. She had at once made him her
confidant. The gist of her confessions was that she did not care a
bit about one day marrying a well brought-up young man—most likely
she would never marry. What tempted and charmed and delighted her
was to lure other women's husbands away from them. She was a little
daemonic wrecker; she often appeared to him like a little bird of
prey, that would fain have made him, too, her booty. He had studied
her very, very closely. For the rest, she had had no great success
with him. "She did not get hold of me, but I got hold of her—for my
play. Then I fancy" (here he chuckled again) "she consoled herself
with some one else." Love seemed to mean for her only a sort of
morbid imagination. This, however, was only one side of her nature.
His little model had had a great deal of heart and of womanly
understanding; and thanks to the spontaneous power she could gain
over him, every woman might, if she wished it, guide some man
towards the good. "Thus Ibsen spoke," says Elias, "calmly and
coolly, gazing as it were into the far distance, like an artist
taking an objective view of some experience—like Lubek speaking of
his soul-thefts. He had stolen a soul, and put it to a double
employment. Thea Elvsted and Hilda Wangel are intimately
related—are, indeed only different expressions of the same nature."
If Ibsen actually declared Thea and Hilda to be drawn from one
model, we must of course take his word for it; but the relationship
is hard to discern.There can be no reasonable doubt, then, that the Gossensass
episode gave the primary impulse toThe Master
Builder. But it seems pretty well established,
too, that another lady, whom he met in Christiania after his return
in 1891, also contributed largely to the character of Hilda. This
may have been the reason why he resented Fraulein Bardach's
appropriating to herself the title of "Princess of
Orangia."The play was published in the middle of December 1892. It was
acted both in Germany and England before it was seen in the
Scandinavian capitals. Its first performance took place at the
Lessing Theatre, Berlin, January 19, 1893, with Emanuel Reicher as
Solness and Frl. Reisenhofer as Hilda. In London it was first
performed at the Trafalgar Square Theatre (now the Duke of York's)
on February 20, 1893, under the direction of Mr. Herbert Waring and
Miss Elizabeth Robins, who played Solness and Hilda. This was one
of the most brilliant and successful of English Ibsen productions.
Miss Robins was almost an ideal Hilda, and Mr. Waring's Solness was
exceedingly able. Some thirty performances were give in all, and
the play was reproduced at the Opera Comique later in the season,
with Mr. Lewis Waller as Solness. In the following year Miss Robins
acted Hilda in Manchester. In Christiania and Copenhagen the play
was produced on the same evening, March 8, 1893; the Copenhagen
Solness and Hilda were Emil Poulsen and Fru Hennings. A Swedish
production, by Lindberg, soon followed, both in Stockholm and
Gothenburg. In ParisSolness le
constructeurwas not seen until April 3, 1894,
when it was produced by "L'OEuvre" with M. Lugne-Poe as Solness.
The company, sometimes with Mme. Suzanne Despres and sometimes with
Mme. Berthe Bady as Hilda, in 1894 and 1895 presented the play in
London, Brussels, Amsterdam, Milan, and other cities. In October
1894 they visited Christiania, where Ibsen was present at one of
their performances, and is reported by Herman Bang to have been so
enraptured with it that he exclaimed, "This is the resurrection of
my play!" On this occasion Mme. Bady was the Hilda. The first
performance of the play in America took place at the Carnegie
Lyceum, New York, on January 16, 1900, with Mr. William H. Pascoe
as Solness and Miss Florence Kahn as Hilda. The performance was
repeated in the course of the same month, both at Washington and
Boston.In England, and probably elsewhere as well,The Master Builderproduced a curious
double effect. It alienated many of the poet's staunchest admirers,
and it powerfully attracted many people who had hitherto been
hostile to him. Looking back, it is easy to see why this should
have been so; for here was certainly a new thing in drama, which
could not but set up many novel reactions. A greater contrast could
scarcely be imagined than that between the hard, cold, precise
outlines ofHedda Gablerand the
vague mysterious atmosphere ofThe Master
Builder, in which, though the dialogue is
sternly restrained within the limits of prose, the art of drama
seems for ever on the point of floating away to blend with the art
of music. Substantially, the play is one long dialogue between
Solness and Hilda; and it would be quite possible to analyse this
dialogue in terms of music, noting (for example) the announcement
first of this theme and then of that, the resumption and
reinforcement of a theme which seemed to have been dropped, the
contrapuntal interweaving of two or more motives, a scherzo here, a
fugal passage there. Leaving this exercise to some one more skilled
in music (or less unskilled) than myself, I may note that inThe Master BuilderIbsen resumes his
favourite retrospective method, from which inHedda Gablerhe had in great measure
departed. But the retrospect with which we are here concerned is
purely psychological. The external events involved in it are few
and simple in comparison with the external events which are
successively unveiled in retrospective passages ofThe Wild DuckorRosmersholm. The matter of the play is
the soul-history of Halvard Solness, recounted to an impassioned
listener—so impassioned, indeed, that the soul-changes it begets in
her form an absorbing and thrilling drama. The graduations,
retardations, accelerations of Solness's self-revealment are
managed with the subtlest art, so as to keep the interest of the
spectator ever on the stretch. The technical method was not new; it
was simply that which Ibsen had been perfecting fromPillars of Societyonward; but it was
applied to a subject of a nature not only new to him, but new to
literature.That the play is full of symbolism it would be futile to
deny; and the symbolism is mainly autobiographic. The churches
which Solness sets out building doubtless represent Ibsen's early
romantic plays, the "homes for human beings" his social drama;
while the houses with high towers, merging into "castles in the
air," stand for those spiritual dramas, with a wide outlook over
the metaphysical environment of humanity, on which he was
henceforth to be engaged. Perhaps it is not altogether fanciful to
read a personal reference into Solness's refusal to call himself an
architect, on the ground that his training has not been
systematic—that he is a self-taught man. Ibsen too was in all
essentials self-taught; his philosophy was entirely unsystematic;
and, like Solness, he was no student of books. There may be an
introspective note also in that dread of the younger generation to
which Solness confesses. It is certain that the old Master-Builder
was not lavish of his certificates of competence to young
aspirants, though there is nothing to show that his reticence ever
depressed or quenched any rising genius.