Read Endgame Act Without Words I Online
Authors: Samuel Beckett
Feels like a ray of sunshine.
[
Pause.
]
No?
CLOV
No.
HAMM
It isn’t a ray of sunshine I feel on my face?
CLOV
No.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
Am I very white?
[
Pause. Angrily.
]
I’m asking you am I very white!
CLOV
Not more so than usual.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
Open the window.
CLOV
What for?
HAMM
I want to hear the sea.
CLOV
You wouldn’t hear it.
HAMM
Even if you opened the window?
CLOV
No.
HAMM
Then it’s not worth while opening it?
CLOV
No.
HAMM
[
violently
] Then open it!
[
Clov gets up on the ladder, opens the window. Pause.
]
Have you opened it?
CLOV
Yes.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
You swear you’ve opened it?
CLOV
Yes.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
Well . . . !
[
Pause.
]
It must be very calm.
[
Pause. Violently.
]
I’m asking you is it very calm!
CLOV
Yes.
HAMM
It’s because there are no more navigators.
[
Pause.
]
You haven’t much conversation all of a sudden. Do you not feel well?
CLOV
I’m cold.
HAMM
What month are we?
[
Pause.
]
Close the window, we’re going back.
[
Clov closes the window, gets down, pushes the chair back to its place, remains standing behind it, head bowed.
]
Don’t stay there, you give me the shivers!
[
Clov returns to his place beside the chair.
]
Father!
[
Pause. Louder.
]
Father!
[
Pause.
]
Go and see did he hear me.
[
Clov goes to Nagg’s bin, raises the lid, stoops. Unintelligible words. Clov straightens up.
]
CLOV
Yes.
HAMM
Both times?
[
Clov stoops. As before.
]
CLOV
Once only.
HAMM
The first time or the second?
[
Clov stoops. As before.
]
CLOV
He doesn’t know.
HAMM
It must have been the second.
CLOV
We’ll never know.
[
He closes lid.
]
HAMM
Is he still crying?
CLOV
No.
HAMM
The dead go fast.
[
Pause.
]
What’s he doing?
CLOV
Sucking his biscuit.
HAMM
Life goes on.
[
Clov returns to his place beside the chair.
]
Give me a rug, I’m freezing.
CLOV
There are no more rugs.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
Kiss me.
[
Pause.
]
Will you not kiss me?
CLOV
No.
HAMM
On the forehead.
CLOV
I won’t kiss you anywhere.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
[
holding out his hand
] Give me your hand at least.
[
Pause.
]
Will you not give me your hand?
CLOV
I won’t touch you.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
Give me the dog.
[
Clov looks round
for
the dog.
]
No!
CLOV
Do you not want your dog?
HAMM
No.
CLOV
Then I’ll leave you.
HAMM
[
head bowed, absently
] That’s right.
[
Clov goes to door, turns.
]
CLOV
If I don’t kill that rat he’ll die.
HAMM
[
as before
] That’s right.
[
Exit Clov. Pause.
]
Me to play.
[
He takes out his handkerchief, unfolds it, holds it spread out before him.
]
We’re getting on.
[
Pause.
]
You weep, and weep, for nothing, so as not to laugh, and little by little . . . you begin to grieve.
[
He folds the handkerchief, puts it back in his pocket, raises his head.
]
All those I might have helped.
[
Pause.
]
Helped!
[
Pause.
]
Saved.
[
Pause.
]
Saved!
[
Pause.
]
The place was crawling with them!
[
Pause. Violently.
]
Use your head, can’t you, use your head, you’re on earth, there’s no cure for that!
[
Pause.
]
Get out of here and love one another! Lick your neighbor as yourself!
[
Pause. Calmer.
]
When it wasn’t bread they wanted it was crumpets.
[
Pause. Violently.
]
Out of my sight and back to your petting parties!
[
Pause.
]
All that, all that!
[
Pause.
]
Not even a real dog!
[
Calmer.
]
The end is in the beginning and yet you go on.
[
Pause.
]
Perhaps I could go on with my story, end it and begin another.
[
Pause.
]
Perhaps I could throw myself out on the floor.
[
He pushes himself painfully off his seat, falls back again.
]
Dig my nails into the cracks and drag myself forward with my fingers.
[
Pause.
]
It will be the end and there I’ll be, wondering what can have brought it on and wondering what can have . . .
[
he hesitates
]
. . . why it was so long coming.
[
Pause.
]
There I’ll be, in the old shelter, alone against the silence and . . .
[
he hesitates
]
. . . the stillness. If I can hold my peace, and sit quiet, it will be all over with sound, and motion, all over and done with.
[
Pause.
]
I’ll have called my father and I’ll have called my . . .
[
he hesitates
]
. . . my son. And even twice, or three times, in case they shouldn’t have heard me, the first time, or the second.
[
Pause.
]
I’ll say to myself, He’ll come back.
[
Pause.
]
And then?
[
Pause.
]
And then?
[
Pause.
]
He couldn’t, he has gone too far.
[
Pause.
]
And then?
[
Pause. Very agitated.
]
All kinds of fantasies! That I’m being watched! A rat! Steps!
Breath held and then . . .
[
He breathes out.
]
Then babble, babble, words, like the solitary child who turns himself into children, two, three, so as to be together, and whisper together, in the dark.
[
Pause.
]
Moment upon moment, pattering down, like the millet grains of . . .
[
he hesitates
]
. . . that old Greek, and all life long you wait for that to mount up to a life.
[
Pause. He opens his mouth to continue, renounces.
]
Ah let’s get it over!
[
He whistles. Enter Clov with alarm-clock. He halts beside the chair.
]
What? Neither gone nor dead?
CLOV
In spirit only.
HAMM
Which?
CLOV
Both.
HAMM
Gone from me you’d be dead.
CLOV
And vice versa.
HAMM
Outside of here it’s death!
[
Pause.
]
And the rat?
CLOV
He’s got away.
HAMM
He can’t go far.
[
Pause. Anxious.
]
Eh?
CLOV
He doesn’t need to go far.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
Is it not time for my pain-killer?
CLOV
Yes.
HAMM
Ah! At last! Give it to me! Quick!
[
Pause.
]
CLOV
There’s no more pain-killer.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
[
appalled
] Good . . . !
[
Pause.
]
No more pain-killer!
CLOV
No more pain-killer. You’ll never get any more pain-killer.
[
Pause.
]
HAMM
But the little round box. It was full!
CLOV
Yes. But now it’s empty.
[
Pause. Clov starts to move about the room. He is looking for a place to put down the alarm-clock.
]
HAMM
[
soft
] What’ll I do?
[
Pause. In a scream.
]
What’ll I do?
[
Clov sees the picture, takes it down, stands it on the floor with its face to the wall, hangs up the alarm-clock in its place.
]
What are you doing?
CLOV
Winding up.
HAMM
Look at the earth.
CLOV
Again!
HAMM
Since it’s calling to you.
CLOV
Is your throat sore?
[
Pause.
]
Would you like a lozenge?
[
Pause.
]
No.
[
Pause.
]
Pity.
[
Clov goes, humming, towards window right, halts before it, looks up at it.
]
HAMM
Don’t sing.
CLOV
[
turning towards Hamm
] One hasn’t the right to sing any more?
HAMM
No.
CLOV
Then how can it end?
HAMM
You want it to end?
CLOV
I want to sing.
HAMM
I can’t prevent you.
[
Pause. Clov turns towards window right.
]
CLOV
What did I do with that steps?
[
He looks around for ladder.
]
You didn’t see that steps?
[
He sees it.
]
Ah, about time.
[
He goes towards window left.
]
Sometimes I wonder if I’m in my right mind. Then it passes over and I’m as lucid as before.
[
He gets up on ladder, looks out of window.
]
Christ, she’s under water!
[
He looks.
]
How can that be?
[
He pokes forward his head, his hand above his eyes.
]
It hasn’t rained.
[
He wipes the pane, looks. Pause.
]
Ah what a fool I am! I’m on the wrong side!
[
He gets down, takes a few steps towards window right.
]
Under water!
[
He goes back for ladder.
]
What a fool I am!
[
He carries ladder towards window right.
]
Sometimes I wonder if I’m in my right senses. Then it passes off and I’m as intelligent as ever.
[
He sets down ladder under window right, gets up on it, looks out of window. He turns towards Hamm.
]
Any particular sector you fancy? Or merely the whole thing?
HAMM
Whole thing.
CLOV
The general effect? Just a moment.
[
He looks out of window. Pause.
]
HAMM
Clov.
CLOV
[
absorbed
] Mmm.
HAMM
Do you know what it is?
CLOV
[
as before
] Mmm.
HAMM
I was never there.
[
Pause.
]