Hedda.
Yes, there is an odour of mortality about it. It reminds me of a bouquet—the day after the ball. [Clasps her hands behind her head, leans back in her chair and looks at him.] Oh, my dear Judge—you cannot imagine how horribly I shall bore myself here.
Brack.
Why should not you, too, find some sort of vocation in life, Mrs. Hedda?
Hedda.
A vocation—that should attract me?
Brack.
If possible, of course.
Hedda.
Heaven knows what sort of a vocation that could be. I often wonder whether
[Breaking off.] But that would never do either.Brack.
Who can tell? Let me hear what it is.
Hedda.
Whether I might not get Tesman to go into politics, I mean.
Brack.
[Laughing.] Tesman? No really now, political life is not the thing for him—not at all in his line.
Hedda.
No, I daresay not.—But if I could get him into it all the same?