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Where in Ibsen's "A Doll's House" is the word "wreck" used in isolation?

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The word "wreck" is not used in isolation anywhere in Henrik Ibsen's "A Doll's House." The term appears metaphorically in Act III during a conversation between Kristine Linde and Krogstad, where they discuss their lives as akin to survivors clinging to wreckage after a shipwreck. This metaphor highlights their decision to reunite and improve their lives together. There are other references to damage, but "wreck" itself does not appear in dialogue or stage directions.

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In Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House, the only reference to "wreck" is found in Act III, when Kristine Linde and Krogstad use an extended metaphor to compare their lives to those of survivors floating in the water after a shipwreck, clinging to the wreckage.

I downloaded the entire play from Project Gutenberg into a Word document. Then I searched for any use of the word "wreck." It was not used in dialogue or even in stage direction. It would appear that the only references in the play are made by Mrs. Linde and Krogstad when they are reunited after years of separation and decide to throw their "lots" together in order to not only survive, but improve their lives, especially in light of the fondness they once shared for each other.

There are a great many other references to damage: when Rank speaks of his...

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disease and impending doom brought on by the destruction his father's wild life has exacted on Dr. Rank's body and health. There is also, of course,Torvald Helmer's accusations that Nora has destroyed his life in her attempts to save him.

However, I cannot find the use of the word "wreck" in any part of the play.

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