
Originally Posted by
Janine
While Pastor Manders can ill afford a public liaison with a respected married woman, a very private affair with a single and unimportant 'woman of pleasure' is viable - and, indeed, unremarkable for these 'pillars of society' (with their Parisian trips). Regine (Regina in English), duped by her mother and the Alving's, sinks as low as her half-brother...
Well, if you want to see it that way you are entitled.
To see Manders and Regine differently, you need alternative explanations for the overtly provocative words, bolded in the following passages. Can you explain away this mountain of evidence suggesting that Manders - like the Captain a 'pillar of society' - is a fornicator and, in at least one instance, an adulterer?
MRS. ALVING. Not in the least. Oswald has rather a clerical curve about his mouth, I think.
MANDERS. Yes, yes; some of my colleagues have much the same expression.
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MANDERS. [Softly, with emotion.] And was that the upshot of my life's hardest battle?
MRS. ALVING. Call it rather your most pitiful defeat.
MANDERS. It was my greatest victory, Helen --the victory over myself.
MRS. ALVING. It was a crime against us both.
MANDERS. When you went astray, and came to me crying, "Here I am; take me!" I commanded you, saying, "Woman, go home to your lawful husband." Was that a crime?
MRS. ALVING. Yes, I think so.
MANDERS. We two do not understand each other.
MRS. ALVING. Not now, at any rate.
MANDERS. Never --never in my most secret thoughts have I regarded you otherwise than as another's wife.
MRS. ALVING. Oh --indeed?
MANDERS. Helen --!
MRS. ALVING. People so easily forget their past selves.
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MRS. ALVING. Pastor Manders knows all about it.
REGINA. [Busied in putting on her shawl.] Well then, I'd better make haste and get away by this steamer. The Pastor is such a nice man to deal with; and I certainly think I've as much right to a little of that money as he has--that brute of a carpenter.
MRS. ALVING. You are heartily welcome to it, Regina.
REGINA. [Looks hard at her.] I think you might have brought me up as a gentleman's daughter, ma'am; it would have suited me better. [Tosses her head.] But pooh--what does it matter! [With a bitter side glance at the corked bottle.] I may come to drink champagne with gentlefolks yet.
MRS. ALVING. And if you ever need a home, Regina, come to me.
REGINA. No, thank you, ma'am. Pastor Manders will look after me, I know. And if the worst comes to the worst, I know of one house where I've every right to a place [as the Captain's daughter by birth and by morals].
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That Pastor Manders is little better than Chamberlain Alving in terms of debauchery is clear. Regine obviously has inside information against Manders not available to us - very probably from Engstrand. To believe Manders did not have sex that night with Helene, undermines her integrity, which I now believe is iron clad.
That all except Mrs Alving are degenerate, now seems crucial to the play's ending, to her 'speechless horror'.