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1. THE CHRISTMAS TREE. The Christmas treeis delivered inNora’sflurry of excitement for Christmas. It symbolizes family happiness and unity, as well as the joy Nora takes in making her home pleasant and attractive. At the beginning of Act Two, the tree has been stripped and the candles burned out; the stage directions dictate that it should look “bedraggled.” This represents the end of Nora’s innocence and foreshadows the Helmer family’s eventual disintegration. 2. MACAROONS. Torvaldhas bannedNorafrom eatingmacaroons. Although Nora claims that she never disobeys Torvald, this is proved false in the very opening of the play when Nora eats macaroons while she was alone in the living room. The macaroons come to represent Nora’s disobedience and deceit. She lies toDr. Rankabout having been given some byMrs. Linde, and after giving a particularly tempestuous performance of thetarantellaasks that macaroons be served at dinner, indicating a relationship between the macaroons and Nora’s inner passions, both of which she must hide within her marriage. 3. THE TARANTELLA. Like themacaroons, thetarantellasymbolizes a side ofNorathat she cannot normally show. It is a fiery, passionate dance that allows Nora to drop the façade of the perfect mild-mannered Victorian wife. Throughout the play, Nora uses performance to please Torvald, and the tarantella is no exception; he admits that watching her perform it makes her desire her. However, this is only under very controlled circumstances, and Torvald seems to enjoy the fact that it is a performance that impresses other people more than anything. 4. THE DOLL’S HOUSE. There are a few mentions of doll’s houses early on in the play, for example whenNorashowsTorvald the dolls she bought for her daughter and says that the fact that they are cheap doesn’t matter because she will probably break them soon anyway. This is interesting as it suggests that Nora is raising her daughter for a life similar to Nora’s own, yet simultaneously foreshadows Nora breaking up her family life by leaving Torvald. When Nora plays with her children, she also refers to them as her “little dollies.” However, it is not until the end of the play that the metaphor becomes explicitly clear. Nora tells Torvald that both he and her father treated her like a doll and cites this as one of the reasons why she has become dissatisfied and disillusioned with her life with him.