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History Trivia / PeerGynt

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* ReferencedBy: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.

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* ReferencedBy: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I 'I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ lover!' but were changed in the final draft to ‘As 'As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.waited'.
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* TeasingCreator: The "unknown passenger". Oh boy. Peer believes himself to be the only passenger on the ship that carries him home at the beginning of the fifth act. Then, a MysteriousWaif pops up from nowhere, and ''everybody else'' is ignorant of him. The passenger states that he is interested in Peer's body, is rejected on this and quietly leaves. When he shows up again, Peer is hanging on for dear life on a turned life boat. He once again brings up the topic of Peer's body, and from here on, [[MindScrew the dialogue gets positively weird]]. To this day, scholars have been totally in disarray about who or what this "passenger" is, or what he really means. Knowing Ibsen, he could have pulled TheWalrusWasPaul on us - but he never actually stated it.

to:

* TeasingCreator: The "unknown passenger". Oh boy. Peer believes himself to be the only passenger on the ship that carries him home at the beginning of the fifth act. Then, a MysteriousWaif pops up from nowhere, and ''everybody else'' is ignorant of him. The passenger states that he is interested in Peer's body, is rejected on this and quietly leaves. When he shows up again, Peer is hanging on for dear life on a turned life boat. He once again brings up the topic of Peer's body, and from here on, [[MindScrew the dialogue gets positively weird]]. To this day, scholars have been totally in disarray about who or what this "passenger" is, or what he really means. Knowing Ibsen, he could have pulled TheWalrusWasPaul on us - but he never actually stated it.it.
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Changed: -16

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* ReferencedBy: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.

to:

* ReferencedBy: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.waited’.
* TeasingCreator: The "unknown passenger". Oh boy. Peer believes himself to be the only passenger on the ship that carries him home at the beginning of the fifth act. Then, a MysteriousWaif pops up from nowhere, and ''everybody else'' is ignorant of him. The passenger states that he is interested in Peer's body, is rejected on this and quietly leaves. When he shows up again, Peer is hanging on for dear life on a turned life boat. He once again brings up the topic of Peer's body, and from here on, [[MindScrew the dialogue gets positively weird]]. To this day, scholars have been totally in disarray about who or what this "passenger" is, or what he really means. Knowing Ibsen, he could have pulled TheWalrusWasPaul on us - but he never actually stated it.
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* ShoutOut: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.

to:

* ShoutOut: ReferencedBy: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.
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* ShoutOut[=/=]WhatCouldHaveBeen: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.

to:

* ShoutOut[=/=]WhatCouldHaveBeen: ShoutOut: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.
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* ShoutOut[=/=]WhatCouldHaveBeen: Israeli poet Rachl Bluwstein originally wanted to add a reference to this play in her famous poem ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb43Fy-RGJw Doleful Song]]'': the last lines originally read, ‘I shall wait for you until my life is put out / As Solveig waited for her lover!’ but were changed in the final draft to ‘As [[Literature/TheBible Rachel]] waited’.

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