Estragon is going to be gentle to him. He will to talk to him in a very gentle way and finally after many lines and many silences and stops, they are going to embrace. You see how long it took them to take action which is supposed to have taken place on the first second. It takes all that time for them finally to get to the embracing act. Nothing is spontaneous. Even the embracing act does not pass smoothly. As soon as they embrace he tells him you stink of garlic/ you smell bad/ I do not like to embrace you. And the other says (it is for the kidneys). Again he is diseased. It is comic but the man is suffering. He has physical illness. He is not strong at all. All humans have certain weaknesses. This is what the play is telling us. We are not gods. We are not perfect. We are humans. Then they will be talking about hanging themselves. They repeat the idea of killing themselves
Nora, Torvald, and Dr. Rank each express the belief that a parent is obligated to be honest and upstanding, because a parent’s immorality is passed on to his or her children like a disease. In fact, Dr. Rank does have a disease that is the result of his father’s depravity. Dr. Rank implies that his father’s immorality—his many affairs with women—led him to contract a venereal disease that he passed on to his son, causing Dr. Rank to suffer for his father’s misdeeds. Torvald voices the idea that one’s parents determine one’s moral character when he tells Nora, “Nearly all young criminals had lying -mothers.” He also refuses to allow Nora to interact with their children after he learns of her deceit, for fear that she will corrupt them.
هذا تبع الدزيز في الروايتين فيه بعد في الروايه الثانيه اشياء عن الدزيز غير الكدني بس ماعرفت وينها