In act three of the play, Torvald’s view on their marriage was clear that his job was to protect and care for his wife. At one point Torvald calls Nora “his dearest property.” He also starts to call her pet names such as “little lark” that Nora seems to accept. In the play, Nora said herself that she was nothing more than a plaything. Living with her husband and her father, she doesn’t see a difference in the way they both treat her. She stated that her father treats her the way she treated her dolls, which means that she was very restricted and had to follow and do the things her father had told her to do. Now that Nora’s married, she compares the way Torvald treats her to the way he father did and had concluded that the men