Waiting for Godot – As an
Absurd Play
Beckett
is considered to be an important figure among the French
Absurdists. “Waiting for Godot” is one of the masterpieces
of Absurdist literature. Elements of Absurdity incorporated in the play are so
engaging and lively. It is quite clear from the very word “Absurd” that
it means nonsensical, opposed to reason, something silly, foolish, senseless,
ridiculous and topsy-turvy, therefore, a play having loosely constructed
plot, unrecognizable characters, metaphysical angst is called an absurd
play. Actually the ‘Absurd Theatre’ believes that humanity’s plight
is purposeless in an existence, which is out of harmony with its
surroundings. The awareness about the lack of purpose produces a state of metaphysical
anguish which is the central theme of the Absurd Theatre.
On an absurd play logical construction, rational ideas and intellectually
viable arguments are abandoned and the irrationality for experience is
acted out on the stage instead.
It
is quite safe to label “Waiting for Godot” an absurd play for not
only its plot is loose but its characters are also just
mechanical puppets with their incoherent colloquy. And above all,
its theme is unexplained. “Waiting for Godot” is an
absurd play for it is devoid of conventional characterization and
motivation. Though characters are present but are not recognizable for whatever
they do and whatever they present is purposeless. So far as its dialogue
technique is concerned, it is purely absurd as there is no witty repartee
and pointed dialogues. What a reader or spectator hears is simply the
incoherent babbling which does not have any clear and meaningful ideas. As far
as the action and theme is concerned, it touches the level of Absurd Theatre.
It does not give any comprehensive idea of time and place. Beckett combats
the traditional notions of Time by attacking its two main traditional
ingredients habit and memory. We find Estragon in the main
story and Pozzo in the episode, combating the conventional notions of
time and memory. The study of the play reveals that nothing special happens in
the play nor any significant change in setting is observed. Though a change
occurs but it is only that now the tree has sprouted out four or five leaves. “Nothing
happens, nobody comes … nobody goes, it’s awful!” The beginning, middle and
end of the play do not rise up to the level of a good play, so is absurd.
Though its theme is logical and rational yet it lies in umbrage.
Moreover, “Waiting
for Godot” can also be regarded as an absurd play because it is
different from “poetic theatre”. Neither it makes a considerable
use of dream and fantasy nor does it employ conscious poetic language.
The situation almost remains unchanged and
an enigmatic vein runs throughout the play. The mixture of
comedy and near tragedy proves baffling. In Act-I, the audience is not sure as
to what attitude they should adopt towards the different phases of its
non-action. The ways, in which the two tramps pass their time, seem as if they
were passing their lives in a transparent deception. Godot remains a
mystery and curiosity still holds a sway. Hence, the audience knows that
their endless waiting seems to be absurd. Though, the fact is that
they are conscious of this absurdity, yet is seems to imply that the rest of
the world is waiting for the things, which are more absurd and also
uncertain.
“Waiting
for Godot” is an absurd play for there is no female
character. Characters are there but they are devoid of identity. Estragon
and Vladimir are old acquaintances, but they are not sure of their identity.
Though they breathe, their life is an endless series of blows. The two
main characters in the play are also anti-heroes, as they are devoid of any
conventional traits and disposition of a conventional hero. Hence, they add to
the atmosphere of absurdity of the play. They wait for the ultimate extinction,
but in a frustrated way. This thing produces meaninglessness making
the play absurd.
Moreover,
the ending of the play is also absurd as it is not conclusive in the usual
sense. The wait continues; the human contacts remain unsolved; the problem
of existence remains meaningless, futile and purposeless. The
conversation between the two tramps remain a jargon, really a humbug and
bunkum speech. So all this makes the play an absurd play.
Waiting for Godot as an
Existentialist Play
“Waiting
for Godot” is an existentialist play as it has
clear tints of existentialism. Existentialism is
a philosophical doctrine emphasizing the existence with
its concrete experience. Moreover, it focalizes individual
existence, freedom and choice. It is the view that
humans define their own meaning in life, and try to make rational
decisions despite existing in an irrational universe. It
focuses on the question of human existence, and the feeling that
there is no purpose or explanation at the
core of existence. It holds that, as there is no God or any
other transcendental force, the only way to counter this
nothingness, and hence to find meaning in life, is by embracing existence.
Thus, Existentialism believes that individuals are entirely free and
must take personal responsibility themselves, although with
this responsibility comes angst, a profound anguish or dread. It,
therefore, emphasizes action, freedom and decision as
fundamental, and holds that the only way to rise above the essentially absurd
condition of humanity characterized by suffering and inevitable
death is by exercising our personal freedom and choice.
“Waiting for Godot”, however, is a Christian
existentialist play for it embodies Christian existentialism.
Christian existentialism stresses the idea “In God only, man may find
freedom from tension.” For Christian existentialism, religion leads
to God, whereas Atheistic Existentialism believes that “Man is alone
in a godless universe.” Moreover, they equip that “if there is any God,
it is very difficult to locate Him.”
The
word “Existentialism” stands for one’s “awareness” of
one’s “beingness. There are multiple existentialist strands
in “Waiting for Godot” because it deals not only with existence or
identity but also with the momentary and the internal time. The
time mentioned in “Waiting for Godot” is related to man’s
mental condition that is subjective. For instance, the major problem
for the tramps is to make time pass in such a way that they are least bothered by
it. Vladimir and Estragon constantly complain of the slowness of time
and do their best to hurry it with their futile diversions.
Estragon says: “Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it’s awful.”
It is clear that objective time flows conventionally as compared with the
subjective time that is rather slow for the tramps. They take the impression of
their existence from the changes taking place around them. For example, the
tree has grown five or six leaves. Pozzo has grown blind and Lucky dumb. Here
Estragon remarks: “They all change, only we not.” They often claim to do
something but do nothing in order to save themselves from labour of effort.
There
is a distinction between the momentary and eternal time for
this concept deals with the question of existence and identity. In “Waiting
for Godot” physical time is sometimes taken seriously and
sometimes it is ridiculed or condemned. Estragon once succeeds in
confusing Vladimir about the passage of time as well as about the day of week.
In the same sentence the tramps speak of a million years ago and in the
nineties. Both these constructions are deceptive.
Doubts
about time make the tramps doubtful about their existence and identity. They
are always uncertain of the time spent together in the past. If one tramp
claims an event, it is doubted by the other. Their own identity and
existence in time is also questionable. One day seems to have elapsed
between the first act and the second, yet it becomes extremely difficult to
differentiate this day from the previous by any important physical
evidence.
The
play “Waiting for Godot” is a critique of absurd existence faced by man
represented by both Vladimir and Estragon. “Man is condemned to be free”
in the meaningless world of nothingness where “nothing happens twice” and
it offers “nothing to be done”. Man is so miserable in this wretched
world where he is thrown with without any essence and is prevented from giving
meaning to his existence. Both the tramps are interdependent like all other men. Hope
for salvation is one of themes of the play and is the problem faced by
the whole human race. The two tramps, being “all humanity” realize the
futility of their exercise and are merely filling up the hours with the
pointless activity. Hence their ‘waiting’ is
mechanical and deals with problem of existentialism.
To conclude we
say that the whole picture shows utter hopelessness. Neither time nor
existence; neither reality nor memory; neither past nor present have any
meaning or significance. Acts are meaningless, time does not flow
consecutively, memory seems deceptive, existence is an impression or perhaps a
dream and happiness is extremely and affliction is crystal clear through the
situation of two tramps. They are drifting all the time towards
nothingness. Therefore, the painful
existence, freedom of choice and futility of actions make this play an
existentialist critique.
Who is ‘Godot’ in
‘Waiting for Godot’
Godot’s identity is the most
intruding riddle in ‘Waiting for Godot’. Godot
is a mysterious personality, and it is nowhere made clear who or what he is.
Even at the end of the play we are left guessing or speculating as to who he is
and what exactly he represents. On being asked about the identity of
Godot, Beckett’s reply was equally puzzling. “If I knew,” he said,
“I would have said so in the play.” Moreover,
many critics have offered many interpretations of the identity of Godot.
Therefore, Godot might be perceived in numerous ways like a rescuer, God,
Christ, vision, master, a promise or a false hope etc. Since its publication,
Godot remains an unsolved puzzle.
Much ingenuity has been shown in
establishing at least the origin for Godot’s name. Some of the critics view
Godot as a diminutive form of the word ‘God’. It has also been noted
that the French title of the play, En Attendant Godot, seems
to contain an allusion to a book titled Attente de Dieu,
which would furnish further evidence that “Godot” stands for “God”.
Hence, the name “Godot” either suggests intervention of a supernatural
agency, or stands for a mythical human being whose arrival is expected to
change the situation.
In ‘Waiting for Godot’, to the
two tramps, Godot represents peace, rest from waiting, a sense of arrival,
shelter and comfort. They have a vague notion of their salvation if Godot
comes. His coming means that they will no longer be tramps, homeless wanderers,
but will be ‘saved’. They wait for him even though his coming is by no
means certain. But Godot never comes rather seems to be a kind of distant
mirage. Although Godot fails to appear in the play, he is as real a
character as any of those whom we actually see. Godot very much exists for the
tramps, and he directs the course of the evening for them.
From the conversation of the tramps,
we learn that he lives in the capitalistic world of “family”, “agents”,
“correspondents”, and a “bank account”. The tramps identify him with
power and authority. They worry that, if angered, he might "punish"
them. They’ve made a "prayer" to him in the past. They can’t
be sure if he exists. He’s perpetually absent, but human representatives speak
of him in veiled terms. At the end of
each day, a messenger-boy arrives extending the promise that Godot will come
tomorrow. On hearing that Godot beats the messenger’s brother, the tramps feel
uneasy and think that if they stopped waiting for him he would punish them.
Hence they realize that are tied to waiting. The other boy-messenger reveals
that Godot does nothing and that his beard is probably white. The information
gathered from the messenger-boy vividly alludes to the biblical description of
God. The boy-messenger further tells the
tramps that Godot does “nothing’, which draws our attention to the
barrenness of a mind that expects and waits for the old activity of God or
gods. The play does not deal with God but merely with the concept of God. No
wonder therefore that God’s image is left vague. The theological passages in
the play tell us that what God does is unknown. It appears that he does nothing
at all; and the only information conveyed by the messenger-boy is that, alas,
Godot will not be coming today but tomorrow. Beckett clearly indicates that it
is precisely Godot’s non-arrival which keeps the two tramps waiting for him,
and their faith in him alive. “Let’s go.”—We can’t.”—”Why not?”—”We’re
waiting for Godot.”—“Ah!” According to some philosophers, the proof of
God’s existence lies in His very absence.
It is observed that
once Vladimir and Estragon had seen Godot. But they do not remember
him quite clearly, and his vague promises are treated light-heartedly. Godot is
explicitly vague, merely an empty promise, corresponding to luke-warm piety and
absence of suffering in the tramps. Waiting for Godot has become a habit with
them, a habit which is an adaptation to the meaninglessness of life. Godot’s
function in the play seems to keep his dependents unconscious. The uncertainty
and unreliability with which Godot surrounds himself reveal him as
highly ambivalent. The unconsciousness and ambivalence appear in
his promise to rescue the tramps and in his preventing them from becoming
conscious.
It has been suggested that Godot is
the earthly ideal of a better social order. It has also been suggested that
Godot is death and that the tramps will hang themselves the next
day. Another view is that Godot represents silence. The tramps have
to speak while waiting in order to achieve stillness and silence at last. Or
Godot may be the inaccessible self that Beckett pursues through all
his work, always with the ultimate hope that “This time, perhaps at last it
will be I.” Pozzo was taken as Godot when he appears on the scene as he
clearly has divine attributes and there’s the phonetic confusion of his name
(POT-so) with that of GOD-oh. Some
critics opine that one should not bother too much to know who or what
Godot is. This advice is based on the view that the play is not about “Godot”
but about “waiting”. If it is true, one naturally asks waiting for what?
If the tramps are waiting for Godot, we should know what or who Godot is,
especially because Godot seems to be a descriptive name. One of the critics
emphasises the foolishness of identifying Godot too closely said: “Godot is
that character for whom two tramps are waiting at the edge of a road, and who
does not come.” Perhaps Godot means only something for which one waits
vainly; some promise that remains unfulfilled; some development that does not
occur; some hope that does not materialise. Godot represents the object of
waiting. And the object of waiting is highly subjective. In other words,
waiting for Godot means waiting for something to turn up which does not really
turn up.
Significance of the Title of the Play
A
lot of controversy has risen since the publication of ‘waiting for Godot’.
Critics have not been able to reach any kind of agreement about this play. Even
Beckett himself did not offer much help to interpret the play. The chief
concern of this absurd drama is ‘waiting’ and ‘Godot’ which are
ever puzzling. Throughout their lives, human beings always wait for something,
and Godot simply represents the objective of their waiting — an event, a thing,
a person, death. Beckett has thus depicted in this play a situation which has a
general human application.
The source of the title of the play has aroused a greater controversy than
anything else connected with it. An earlier version of the play was simply
called ‘waiting’. Martin Esslin holds the view that the subject of the
play is not Godot but waiting. There is a general agreement that Godot is of
less importance in the play than waiting, but the source of the word Godot has
excited much curiosity. Beckett himself was of little help and, when asked
about the meaning of Godot he replied, “If I knew I would have said so in the
play.” One of the critics, wishing to pinpoint the foolishness of
trying to identify Godot too closely, said, “Godot is that character for
whom two tramps are waiting at the edge of a road and who does not come.”
Yet those hunting for the meaning of ‘Godot’ have ignored the advice
offered by this critic and by Beckett himself and have displayed much ingenuity
in interpreting the word ‘Godot’. It has been said, for instance, that
the word has been formed from the English ‘God’ and French ‘eau’
(water). It has also been said that ‘Godo’ is spoken Irish for God. Hugh
Kenner has connected the name with his famous theory of the ‘cartesian centaur’
by mentioning the name of a French racing cyclist whose last name was godean.
The source for the full title of the play caused similar anxiety. The most
convincing suggestion in this case comes from Eric Bentley who traces the title
to Balzac’s play ‘Marcadet’. In Balzac’s play, the return of a person
named Godean is anxiously awaited, the frustration of waiting is an much a part
of Balzac’s play as it is of Beckett’s. Martin Esslin has heartily endorsed
another suggestion and so have several commentators. According to another
suggestion, the title of Beckett’s play comes from simone will’s play ‘waiting
for God’. It has been pointed out that Beckett and simone knew each other
well and that Beckett’s play appeared a year after the publication of simone’s.
The influence of will on Beckett is thus a distinct possibility. If this view
be accepted, then ‘waiting for Godot’ can be understood as a religious
allegory. According to yet another view, the source of the title for the play
was odets’s ‘waiting for lefty’. It is believed that the name “odets”
might have itself have suggested to Beckett the name ‘Godot’. There is
still another possibility beckett’s title may have its source in Tom Kromer’s
book called ‘waiting for Nothing?’
The play is a direct presentation of waiting, ignorance, impotence, boredom. We
all are impotent and suffering from boredom, loneliness and alienation. We have
no sons, no daughters, and no women with us, we are all alone like Estragon
and Vladimir. There is no one to accompany is, no one to relieve us of our
misery, pain and suffering. There is indeed, no system, no philosophy, person
or even God that can deliver no free. We wait and wait, that finale, our
relief or freedom does not come, probably Godot would never come whether
we wait hopefully or not.
‘Waiting
for Godot’ is a dramatization of the themes of habit and ‘The sufferings
of being’. Habit is a great deadener, says Vladimir’, and by
the time he says so, he and Estragon have had about ninety minutes on the stage
to prove it. It is the sound of their own voices that re-assumes the two tramps
of their own existence, of which they are not otherwise always certain because
the evidence of their senses is so dubious. The tramps have another reason also
to keep talking. They are drawing out those voices that assail them in the
silence, just as they assailed nearly all Beckett’s heroes.
Vladimir and
Estragon have traveled towards total nihilism, but they have not fully achieved
it. They still retain enough remnants of hope to be fermented by despair. And
in place of hope as a dynamic, they have expectancy. This is the main motif of
the play. The two tramps are in a place and in a mental state in which nothing
happened and time stands still. Their main preoccupation is to pass time as
well as they until might come. They realize the futility of their exercises and
they are merely filling up the hours. In this sense their waiting in
mechanical; it is the same thing as not moving. In another sense it is an
obligation. They have to remain where they are, though they resent doing so and
would like to leave. This mood of expectancy has also a universal validity,
because whenever we wait we are expectant even though we are almost certain
that our waiting will be rewarded.
The title of the play thus brings into our mind about the meaningless waiting
and it is the waiting for Godot who may stand for God, or for a mythical human
being, or for the meaning of life, or for death or for something else.
Waiting for Godot as a
Tragi-Comedy
Tragic-comedy
is a play which claims a plot apt for tragedy but which ends happily like a
comedy. The action is serious in theme and subject matter and tone also
sometimes but it seems to be a tragic catastrophe until an unexpected turn in
events brings out the happy ending. The characters of a tragic-comedy are noble
but they are involved in improbabilities. In such a play tragic and comic
elements are mixed up together
The
English edition of “Waiting for Godot”, published in 1956 describes
the play as a “tragic-comedy” in two acts. There are many
dialogues, gestures, situations and actions that are stuffed of pure comedy.
The total atmosphere of the play is very akin to dark-comedy. For example,
Vladimir is determined not to hear Estragon’s nightmare. The latter pleads with
him in vain to hear him, saying that there is nobody else to whom he may communicate
his private nightmares.
The
audience burst into laughter when they see Estragon putting off and on his
boots. Vladimir’s game with his hat appears as if this is happening in a
circus. Vladimir is suffering from prostrate problem. Vladimir's way of walking
with stiff and short strides is as funny as Estragon’s limping on the stage.
Estragon’s gestures of encouraging Vladimir to urinate off-stage are farcical.
There are many dialogues:
Estragon:
Let’s go.
Vlsadimir:
We can not.
Estragon:
Why not?
Vladimir:
We are waiting for Godot.
(They
do not move.)
Estragon
and Vladimir put on and take off each other’s hat as well as that of lucky
again and again. It shows that in the world of tramps, there is no place for
significant actions. The most farcical situation in the play is the one where
the tramps are testing the strength of the cord with which they wish to hang
themselves. The cord breaks under the strain. One cannot have an uninhabited
laugh at the situation for there is also something deeply uncomfortable.
“Waiting
for Godot” has several moments of anguish and despair. Someone beats Estragon
daily. As Estragon says agitatedly, “Beat me? Certainly they beat me.” The
tramps resent that they should be asked whether it still hurts. It goes without
saying that it hurts all the time. When Vladimir asks Estragon whether his
boots are hurting him, he responds: “Hurts! He wants to know if it hurts!”
A little later Estragon asks Vladimir about his kidney trouble and the latter
replies in the same words: “Hurts! He wants to know if it hurts!” In
fact his trouble is so bad that it does not even permit him to laugh. Life lies
all bleak and barren before them and that only valid comment on it is the one
with which the play opens,“Nothing to be done”. There is a world of
negation in which inactivity is the safest course; as Estragon says: “Do not
let us do anything, it’s safer”. The tramps are living at the barest
level of existence. Carrot, turnips and radishes are all they have to eat.
Estragon’s remarks show tragedy and helplessness: “Nothing happens, nobody
comes, nobody goes, it’s awful.”
The
situation of Lucky is quite pathetic, especially in view of his glorious past,
as Pozzo describes it. His speech tells us that in his sonar moments Lucky must
have brooded deeply over the anguish of the human situation. The anguish breaks
in his incoherent harangue: “in spite of the tennis the labours abandoned
left unfinished graver still abode of stones in a word I resume alas alas
abandoned unfinished”. The comedy in “Waiting for Godot” at
once turns into tragedy when the audience thinks about the helplessness of
tramps. Estragon and Vladimir are waiting for someone who never comes. In order
to pass time, they indulge in irrelevant, meaningless activity. Their life can
be compared with that of a prisoner for whom there is no escape, even suicide
is impossible. Every activity is a mockery of human existence.
The
changing of farce into absurdity brings a lot of tragic sentiment in the play.
Estragon’s nakedness is a picture of ‘man’s miserable condition’. The
absurd living is a major source of tragedy. The source is the situation of
pointless waiting of Estragon and Vladimir. They do not know who Godot is. They
are sure neither about the time nor about the place of their appointment. They
even do not know what will happen if they stop waiting? Lack of essential
knowledge makes them totally impotent and powerless. They are tied to the
situation. Nothing is certain all they can say is “Nothing to be
done”.
The
form of tragic-comedy is highly suitable to Becket’s vision of life. The climax
of Beckett’s tragic-comedy is the role of Lucky. He is burdened with his
master’s luggage and his neck is tied with one end of the rope. His appearance
is not only fantastic but grotesque also. The moment we realize that Pozzo has
learnt all the beautiful things of life from lucky, a half-witted slave who becomes
an image of man’s misery. Lucky has lost
his worth for Pozzo who tends to sell him now and Lucky’s miserable clinging to
his master is pathetic and speaks of merciless exploitation.
Comedy
has been checked by tragic element or sentiments, while the effect of tragedy
has been mitigated by farce created through characters, dialogues, gestures and
actions. We can sum up with the remarks of Sean O’ Casey, “Beckett is a
clever writer, for within him there is no hazard of hope; no desire for it;
nothing in it but a lust for despair and a crying of woe, not in a wilderness,
but in a garden.”
Circular Structure of the
Play
Beckett's plays were among the
earliest and, therefore, created a great deal of confusion among the early
critics. No definite conclusion or resolution can ever be offered to ‘Waiting
for Godot’ because the play is essentially circular and
repetitive in nature. Once again, turn to the Dramatic Divisions section in
these Notes and observe that the structure of each act is exactly alike. A
traditional play, in contrast, has an introduction of' the characters and the
exposition; then, there is a statement of the problem of the play in
relationship to its settings and characters. In Waiting for Godot’ , we
never know where the play takes place, except that it is set on "a
country road." Furthermore, in a traditional play, the characters are
developed, and gradually we come to see the dramatist's world view; the play
then rises to a climax, and there is a conclusion. This type of development is
called a linear development. In the plays of the Theater of the Absurd, the
structure is often exactly the opposite. We have, instead, a circular
structure, and most aspects of this drama support this circular structure in
one way or another.
The setting is the same, and the time
is the same in both acts. Each act begins early in the morning, just as the
tramps are awakening, and both acts close with the moon having risen. The
action takes place in exactly the same landscape — a lonely, isolated road with
one single tree. We are never told where this road is located; all we know is
that the action of the play unfolds on this lonely road. Thus, from Act I to
Act II, there is no difference in either the setting or in the time and, thus,
instead of a progression of time within an identifiable setting, we have a
repetition in the second act of the same things that we saw and heard in the
first act.
More important than the repetition of
setting and time, however, is the repetition of the actions. To repeat, in
addition to the basic structure of actions indicated earlier — that is:
Vladimir
and Estragon Alone
Arrival of
Pozzo and Lucky
Vladimir
and Estragon Alone
Arrival of
Boy Messenger
Vladimir
and Estragon Alone
there are many lesser actions that
are repeated in both acts. At the beginning of each act, for example, several
identical concerns should be noted. Among these is the emphasis on Estragon's
boots. Also, too, Vladimir, when first noticing Estragon, uses virtually the
same words: "So there you are again" in Act I and "There
you are again" in Act II. At the beginning of both acts, the first
discussion concerns a beating that Estragon received just prior to their
meeting. At the beginning of both acts, Vladimir and Estragon emphasize
repeatedly that they are there to wait for Godot. In the endings of both acts,
Vladimir and Estragon discuss the possibility of hanging themselves, and in
both endings they decide to bring some good strong rope with them the next day
so that they can indeed hang themselves. In addition, both acts end with the
same words, voiced differently:
ACT 1:
ESTRAGON:
Well, shall we go?
VLADIMIR:
Yes, let's go.
ACT II:
VLADIMIR:
Well? Shall we go?
ESTRAGON:
Yes, let's go.
And the stage directions following
these lines are exactly the same in each case: "They do not
move."
With the arrival of Pozzo and Lucky
in each act, we notice that even though their physical appearance has
theoretically changed, outwardly they seem the same; they are still tied
together on an endless journey to an unknown place to rendezvous with a
nameless person.
Likewise, the Boy Messenger, while
theoretically different, brings the exact same message: Mr. Godot will not come
today, but he will surely come tomorrow.
Vladimir's difficulties with
urination and his suffering are discussed in each act as a contrast to the
suffering of Estragon because of' his boots. In addition, the subject of
eating, involving carrots, radishes, and turnips, becomes a central image in
each act, and the tramps' involvement with hats, their multiple insults, and
their reconciling embraces — these and many more lesser matters are found
repeatedly in both acts.
Finally, and most important, there
are the larger concepts: first, the suffering of the tramps; second, their
attempts, however futile, to pass time; third, their attempts to part, and,
ultimately, their incessant waiting for Godot — all these make the two acts
clearly repetitive, circular in structure, and the fact that these repetitions
are so obvious in the play is Beckett's manner of breaking away from the
traditional play and of asserting the uniqueness of his own circular structure.
The Breakdown of
Language in Waiting for Godot
Beckett’s plays are highly concerned
with expressing the difficulty of finding meaning in a world subject to change.
His use of language probes the limitations of language both as a means of
communication and as a vehicle for the expression of valid statements, an
instrument of thought.
His use of the
dramatic medium shows that he has tried to find means of expression
beyond language. On the stage one can dispense with words altogether or at
least one can reveal the reality behind the words, as when the actions of the
characters contradict their verbal expression. “Let’s go”, say the two
tramps at the end of each Act of Waiting for Godot, but
the stage directions inform us that “they don’t move”. On the stage
language can be put into such a relationship with action that facts behind the
language can be revealed. Hence the importance of mine, knockabout comedy, and
silence in Beckett’s plays—Krapp’s eating of bananas, the pratfalls of Vladimir
and Estragon, the variety turn with Lucky’s hat, Clov’s immobility at the close
of Endgame, which puts his verbally expressed
desire to leave in question. Beckett’s use of the stage is an attempt to reduce
the gap between the limitations of language and the sense of the human
situation he seeks to express in spite of his strong feeling that words are
inadequate to formulate it. The concreteness and three dimensional nature of
the stage can be used to add new resources to language as an instrument of
thought and exploration of being. Language in Beckett’s plays serves to express
the break-down of language. Where there is no certainty, there can be no
definite meanings—and the impossibility of ever attaining certainty is one of
the main themes of Beckett’s plays. Godot’s promises are vague and uncertain.
In Endgame, Hamm asks, “We’re not beginning to
mean something?” Clov merely laughs and says: “Mean something! You and I
mean something!”
Ten different modes of the breakdown
of language have been noted in Waiting for Godot. They
range from simple misunderstandings and double-entendres to
monologues: as signs of inability to communicate, clichés, repetitions
of synonyms, inability to find the right words, and telegraphic style (loss
of grammatical structure, communication by shouted commands) to Lucky’s
farrago of chaotic nonsense and the dropping of punctuation marks, such as
question marks, as an indication that language has lost its function as a means
of communication, that questions have turned into statements not really
requiring an answer. A whole list of passages drawn up by a critic from Waiting
for Godot shows that the assertions made by one of the
characters are gradually qualified, weakened, and hedged in with reservations until
they are completely taken back. In a meaningless universe, it is always
foolhardy to make a positive statement.
But more important than any merely
formal signs of the disintegration of language and meaning in Beckett’s plays
is the nature of the dialogue itself, which again and again breaks down because
no truly logical discussion or exchange of thoughts occurs in it either through
loss of meaning of single words or through the inability of
characters to remember what has just been said. In a purposeless world that has
lost its ultimate objectives, dialogue, like all action, becomes a mere
game to pass the time.
Beckett’s use of language is thus
designed to devalue language as a vehicle of conceptual thought or as an
instrument for the communication of ready-made answers to the
problems of the human condition. And yet his continued use of language must,
paradoxically, be regarded as an attempt to communicate the incommunicable.
Such an undertaking attacks the cheap, and facile complacency of the
view that to name a problem is to solve it or that the world can be mastered by
neat classification and formulations.
Beckett’s entire work can be seen as
a search for the reality that lies behind mere reasoning in
conceptual terms. He may have devalued language as an instrument for the
communication of ultimate truths, but he has shown himself a great master of
language as an artistic medium. He has moulded words into a superb
instrument for his purpose. In the theatre he has been able to add a new
dimension to language—the counterpoint of action, concrete, many-faceted, not to be explained away, but
making a direct impact on an audience. In Beckett’s theatre it is possible to
bypass the stage of conceptual thinking altogether, as an abstract
painting by passes the stage of the recognition of natural objects.
In ‘Waiting for Godot’ and ‘Endgam’e, plays
drained of character, plot, and meaningful dialogue, Beckett has shown
that such a seemingly impossible feat can in fact be accomplished.
“Waiting for Godot is
not about Godot or even about waiting. It is waiting.”
"Nothing happens, nobody
comes, nobody goes, it’s awful."
The two key words in the title are “waiting”
and “Godot”. What Godot exactly means has been the subject of much
controversy. It has been suggested that Godot is a weakened form of the word “God.”
Godot may therefore suggest the intervention of a supernatural agency. Or
perhaps Godot stands for a mythical human being whose arrival is
expected to change the situation. We may presume, too, that both these
possibilities (a supernatural agency and a supposed human being) may be implied
through the use of the name “Godot”. Furthermore, although Godot fails
to appear in the play, he is as real a character as any of those whom we
actually see. However, the subject of the play is not Godot; the
subject is “waiting”, the act of waiting as an essential characteristic
aspect of the human condition. Throughout their lives, human beings always
wait for something; and Godot simply represents the objective of
their waiting—an event, a thing, a person, death. Beckett has thus depicted in
this play a situation which has a general human application.
At first sight this play does
not appear to have any particular relationship with the human predicament. For
instance, we feel hardly any inclination to identify ourselves with the two
tramps who are indifferent to all the concerns of civilized life. Godot
sounds as if he might have some significance; but he does not even appear on
the stage. However, soon we are made to realize that Vladimir and
Estragon are waiting and that their waiting is of a particular kind. Although
they may say that they are waiting for Godot, they cannot say who or what Godot
is, nor can they be sure that they are waiting at the right place or on the
right day, or what would happen when Godot comes, or what would happen if they
stopped waiting. They have no watches, no time-tables, and there is no one from
whom they can get much information. They cannot get the essential knowledge,
and they are ignorant.
They tell stories, sing songs, play
verbal games, pretend to be Pozzo and Lucky, do physical exercises. But all
these activities are mere stop-gaps serving only to pass the time. They
understand this perfectly. “Come on, Gogo,” pleads Didi, “return the ball, can’t you, once in a way?”
and Estragon does. As Estragon says later, “We don’t manage too badly, eh
Didi, between, the two of us.......We always find something, eh Didi, to give
us the impression we exist”
Here we have the very essence of
boredom—actions repeated long after the reason for them has been forgotten, and
talk purposeless in itself but valuable as a way to kill time. We could
appropriately say that the play is not about Godot or even about
waiting; the play puts “waiting” on the stage. The
play is about waiting, ignorance, impotence, boredom, all these having
been made visible on the stage before us. As a critic says, Beckett in his
dramas does not write about things but presents the things themselves. In
other words, a play by Beckett is a direct expression or presentation of the
thing itself as distinct from any description of it or statement about it. In
the waiting of the two tramps, we, the audience, recognize our own experience.
We may never have waited by a tree on a deserted country road for a distant
acquaintance to keep his appointment, but we have certainly experienced
other situations in which we have waited and waited.
When Pozzo and Lucky first appear,
neither Vladimir nor Estragon seems to recognize them; Estragon even
takes Pozzo for Godot. But after they have gone, Vladimir comments that
they have changed since their last appearance. Estragon insists that he did not
know them while Vladimir insists: “We know them, I tell you. You
forget everything.” In Act II, when Pozzo and Lucky re-appear, cruelly
deformed by the action of time, the tramps again have their doubts whether
these are the same people whom they met on the previous day. Nor does Pozzo
remember them. To wait means to experience the action of time, which is
constantly changing. And yet, as nothing real ever happens, that change is in
itself an illusion. “The tears of the world are a constant quantity,”
says Pozzo, “For each one who begins to weep somewhere else another stops.”
The tramps are waiting for nothing in
particular. They even have to remind each other of the very fact that they are
waiting and of what they are waiting for. Thus, actually they are not waiting
for anything. But, exposed as they are to the daily continuation of their
existence, they cannot help concluding that they must be waiting.
Human Relationships in
Waiting for Godot
In ‘Waiting for Godot’ we have the
two major relationships which mainly constitute the central theme of the drama.
Inspite of Vladimir-Estragon relationship and Puzzo-Lucky relationship we have
in this play the absent Godot’s relationship with these characters and with his
servant boy. We have to judge how these relationships form the fabric of the
drama.
Vladimir and Estragon are the two
main figures of the play. Estragon seems to be a cowardly person who suffers
from nightmarish visions. So he needs the care and guardianship of his friend
and really cannot do anything without him. Vladimir on the other hand is
certainly more intelligent and more alert than Estragon. But inspite of that he
is more or less a pathetic character finding himself quite himself and feeling
compelled indefinitely to wait for Godot who is likely to bring about a change
in the present situation but whose arrival seems to be very doubtful. Both
Estragon and Vladimir represent the ordeal of waiting. They also represent
ignorance, helplessness, impotence and boredom. They do not have the essential
knowledge; they do not know who exactly Godot is; they do not know what Godot
will do for them; they do not know what would happen if they stopped waiting for
Godot. They are forced to resort to various devices to pass time but each
attempt sizzles out. This passing of the time is a mutual obsession with the
two men. Nothingness is what these tramps are fighting against, and nothingness
is the reason why they keep talking. The condition of the two helpless
individuals is the condition of everyman.
Vladimir-Estragon relationship
symbolizes a relationship of naturalistic. Occasionally the two tramps talk of
parting but never take the suggestion seriously. They illustrate the bond of
understanding. They are full of frustration and resentment, but they cling to
each other with a mixture of interdependence and affection deriving comfort
from calling each other by the childish names ‘Gogo’ and ‘Didi’. Again they are
incapable of anything more than mere beginnings of impulse, desires, thoughts,
moods, memories and impressions. Vladimir compares their proud past with their
gloomy present now and then.
Vladimir and Estragon are the
distinct individuals and Estragon are the distinct individuals having different
characters, attitudes and temperaments. They are alive in a non-world. In spite
of their inaction and pointlessness of their existence these two men still want
to go on like millions of people who want to go even when their life becomes
pointless.
The theme of the disintegration and
regression is mainly symbolized by Puzzo-Lucky relationship. Puzzo and Lucky
symbolize the relationship between capital and labour or between wealth and the
artist. Some critics tell us that Puzzo is no other than Godot himself.
According to this view Godot is God and Puzzo is, therefore, God. Some critics
also are of the view that while Puzzo and Lucky may be body and intellect, master
and slave, capitalist and proletariat, colonizer and colonized, cain and Abel,
sadist and masochist, Joyce and Beckett, they represent essentially and more
simply one way of getting through life with someone else. Just as Vladimir and
Estragon, more sympathetically another way of doing so.
The relationship between Pozzo and
Lucky is reflected in the physical bond that holds them together—the link of
the rope. The relationship between them is that of dominant and the dominating,
though in the second act it takes on the aspect that of the dumb leading the
blind. The relationship also represents the exploitation of the social life
where Pozzo is one of the haves, dinning on chicken and wine, while Lucky is
the have-not to whom he throws the gnawed bones. The drudgery and inhuman
treatment have reduced Lucky to the level of an animal. Lucky has to bear all
sorts of bags and baggage. But he is not treated as a man. So he is below the
level of animals, rather a mere machine in some respect.
Lucky and Puzzo create a metaphor of
society. Although Pozzo and Lucky present an obvious and sharp contrast to each
other. They have one thing in common—They are both driven by a desperate
attempt to avoid panic which would ruin them if they lost their belief. It
becomes more and more evident in the course of the play that Lucky believes
that his safety his only with the pattern of a mutual sadomasochistic
relationship between them. Moreover, Pozzo-Lucky pair may be compared to the
collective pseudo-ego.
One critic is of the view that Pozzo
represents mankind and Lucky represents Christ. If this view is accepted what
takes place before the tramps is the reacting of the Redemption. Another
possible interpretation is that Pozzo represents the psychological aspect of
human personality and Lucky the spiritual which is in time brutalized by the
treatment.
Moreover, Godot seems to be some sort
of medieval land-lord. He has agents and correspondents working for him; he has
a shepherd who rears the sheep and a goatherd who rears the goats. Actually
Godot is capricious in his relationship, he beats the one but loves the other.
The tramps are afraid of Godot, so is the boy. Thus Godot rules through fear.
Thus, these three inter-relationships
are very much significant from the dramatic point of view. The tramps’ waiting
symbolizes humanity’s vain hope of salvation. Moreover, the meaninglessness and
the helplessness which are the main issues of the drama are focused by these
relations.
Theme of Nothingness in
Waiting for Godot
Jean-Paul
Sartre asserts that at the root of our being there is nothingness. Samuel
Becket also asserts in the play that nothingness is at the root of our
existence, especially in the life of the modern people. Whereas in the
traditional play we see a concentrated single action motivates the whole play,
here in the case of Waiting for Godot everything is fueled by the sense of ‘nothingness’.
In fact, here nothing creates everything.
Whether
we look at or look into the play, the sense of nothingness determines the
course of the whole play. In the play, both the form and the content are
structured by an encircling sense of nothingness. Apart from form and content
every outer and inner component of the play serves complementary role to
establish the idea of ‘nothingness’. Every aspect of the play -
structure, theme, setting, character, dialogue or some other behavioral silent
activities- is motivated by one thing that is nothingness—the nothingness of
the human life. But here ‘nothingness’ points its finger toward ‘everything’
–everything that modern people face physically and psychologically after two
World Wars.
After
two World Wars almost all literary activities were predetermined by a sense of
nothingness in the early 20th century. The theatre of the absurd describes a
mood, a tone towards life, where man's existence is a dilemma of purposeless,
meaningless, and pointless activity. It is complete denial of age-old values.
It has no plot, no characterization, no logical sequence, and no culmination.
Samuel Becket introduced the concept of absurdity, nothingness and
meaninglessness of life in his play Waiting for Godot.
The
setting of the play is influenced by a mode of nothingness. A desolate country
road, a ditch, and a leafless tree make up the barren, otherworldly landscape,
which bears a surplus of symbolism. The landscape is a symbol of a barren and
fruitless civilization or life. There is nothing to be done and there appears
to be no place better to depart. The tree, usually a symbol of life with its
blossoms and fruit or its suggestion of spring, is apparently dead and
lifeless. But it is also the place to which they believe this Godot has asked
them to come. The setting of the play reminds us the post-war condition of the
world which brought about uncertainties, despair, and new challenges to the all
of mankind.
Next
comes the plot. The beginning and the end of Waiting for Godot, in which "Nothing
happens, nobody comes ... nobody goes, " are also determined by a
sense of nothingness. The play is without the traditional, Aristotelian
structure where there is a beginning, a middle and a perfect ending. Waiting
for Godot does not tell a story; it explores a static situation. On a country
road, by a tree, two old tramps, Vladimir and Estrangon , are waiting. That is
the opening situation at the beginning of act I. At the end of act I they are
informed that Mr. Godot, with whom they believe they have an appointment,
cannot come, but that he will surely come tomorrow. Act-II repeats precisely
the same pattern. The same boy arrives and delivers the same message. So, the
play ends exactly where it started. In this way, a sense of nothingness or
purposelessness acts as a driving force in the play.
As
per as the portrayal of characters is concerned the play also uplifts the sense
of nothingness. A well-made play is expected to present characters that are
well-observed and convincingly motivated. But in the play we have characters
who are not very recognizable human beings and don’t engage themselves in a
motivated action. Two tramps, Vladimir (Didi) and Estragon (Gogo), are waiting
by a tree on a country road for Godot, whom they have never met and who may not
even exist. They argue, make up, contemplate suicide, and discuss passages from
the Bible. The play concludes with a famous exchange:
Vladimir: Well, shall we go?
Estragon: Yes, let’s go.
They do not move.
A
play is expected to entertain the audience with logically built, witty
dialogue. But in this play, like any other absurd play, the dialogue seems to
have degenerated into meaningless babble. ‘Nothing to be done’ are the
words that are repeated frequently. The dialogues the characters exchange are
meaningless banalities. They use language to feel the emptiness between them,
to conceal the fact that they have 'nothing' to talk about to each
other.
In
the play we come across some behavioural attitudes that are more important than
dialogues as they reflect the frustration, hesitation and psychological
complexities of modern people. The opening lines of play are the superb example
of it. When the curtain opens we find Estragon is engaging in his another vain
attempt to take off his boots. His repeated failure attempt symbolizes the
meaninglessness of everyday life activities and more symbolically the
meaninglessness of life itself. Throughout the play there are so many
behavioural attitudes that reflect the nothingness of human life.
To
conclude, in order to better understand how nothingness creates everything in
the play. In Waiting for Godot, where there is no motivated action, the sense
of nothingness plays the pivotal role in determining every aspect of the play.
So, nothingness creates everything in Waiting for Godot.
Hope for Salvation, An Evasion
/ Religious Play
One of the approaches to “Waiting
for Godot” labels it a religious play because
there are ample references to God, Christ and hope of salvation. The two
tramps are waiting for Godot who is variously interpreted by the critics. Some critics
opine that it is a religious drama and the tramps are waiting
for salvation. They hope that one day Godot will come and they will be
‘saved’. But this period of waiting is full of sufferings and
torments. Man wants to escape from these sufferings and the only rescue which
he finds in the panorama of this world is the hope of salvation.
The play “Waiting for Godot” has
a universal appeal. The tramps represent all humanity. Their
sufferings are the sufferings of all human beings, no matter in which
country they live in or what religious beliefs they have. They reflect
modern man’s loneliness, absurdity, forgetfulness, illusions, deferred
hope, meaninglessness, inaction, physical suffering and mental anguish,
death-wish and isolation. Estragon and Vladimir are the diseased
inhabitants of this new wasteland. They suffer from inward and
outward ailments. The only remedy from all these afflictions is in the shape of
Godot.
But problem is that salvation is
also not certain. The uncertainty of the hope of salvation and
the chance bestowed of divine grace pervade the whole play. Vladimir
states it right in the beginning when he says: “One of the thieves was
saved. It’s a remarkable percentage.” He furthers remarks that one of the
two thieves is supposed to have been saved and the other damned. But he asks
why only one of the four evangelists speaks of a thief being saved.
Whereas, other three do not mention any thief at all, and third one says that
both of them abused Christ. In other words, there is fifty-fifty chance of
salvation, but as only one out of four witnesses reports it, the chances are
considerably reduced. As Vladimir points out the fact that everybody seems to
believe that one witness: “It is the only version they know.” Estragon,
whose attitude has been skeptic throughout merely comments: “People are
bloody ignorant apes.” It means that tramps know that salvation is only an
illusion to get relief from the sufferings, only an evasion.
They know that their waiting for Godot is only a hope against hope.
Even from the religious point of view the salvation is not certain. It is
a matter of ‘may be or may not be’. Beckett himself referred in the
writings of St. Augustine: “Do not despair: one of the thieves was
saved. Do not presume: one of the thieves was damned.”
Even Godot himself is unpredictable
in bestowing kindness and punishment. The boy who is his messenger looks after
the goats, is treated well by Godot. But the boy’s brother, who looks after the
sheep, is beaten by Godot. The parallel to Cain and Abel is
evident. If Godot’s kindness is bestowed as a matter of chance, his coming is
not a source of pure joy. It can also mean damnation. When in Act-II Pozzo
and Lucky return and two tramps try to identify them, Estragon calls out:
“Abel! Abel!” Pozzo responds. But when Estragon calls out: “Cain!
Cain!” Pozzo responds again and Estragon concludes: “He is all
humanity”. But in spite of this pessimism which
shows the helplessness of humanity, it might be argued that two tramps who
are waiting for Godot, are somewhat superior to Pozzo and Lucky who have no
object, no appointment, and are wholly egocentric and wrapped in
their sadomasochistic relationship. Estragon and Vladimir are superior to
both Pozzo and Lucky – not because naïve. They are aware that all we do in this
life is nothing, when seen against the senseless action of
time, which is in itself an illusion. They are aware that
suicide would be the best solution to get rid of sufferings. They are less
self-centered. For a brief moment, Vladimir is aware of
the full horror of the human condition: “The air is full of our cries … At
me too someone is looking …” But the habit of waiting prevents them from
the awareness of the full reality of their existence.
To conclude we can say that
the hope for salvation may be an evasion of
suffering and anguish that spring from facing the reality of the
human condition. But even then this illusion is necessary to keep one on the
right path. As Ibsen in the play “The Wild Duck” also says that illusions
are necessary for life. When you take away illusions from one, you take away
his life. Hope for salvation may be an illusion of life but this is
necessary when you have no other way because the wretchedness of modern man can
only be overcome by re-establishing faith. “There is shadow under this red
rock comes in under the shadow of the red rock.”
Lucky's Dance and Speech
Lucky's dance is merely a clumsy shuffling,
which is a complete disappointment to Vladimir and Estragon. Thus they decide
to have Lucky think. They give him his hat, and after protesting Pozzo's
brutality, they arrange themselves for Lucky's performance of thinking. It
takes the form of a long, seemingly incoherent speech. The speech is delivered
as a set piece, yet it is anything but a set piece. Under different directors,
this scene can be variously played. For example, Lucky most often speaks
directly to the audience with the other characters at his back, while Vladimir
and Estragon become more and more agitated as the speech progresses. Often
Vladimir and Estragon run forward and try to stop Lucky from continuing his
speech. As they try to stop Lucky, he delivers his oration in rapid-fire
shouts. At times, Pozzo pulls on Lucky's rope, making it even more difficult
for him to continue with his speech. The frenzied activity on the stage, the
rapid delivery of the speech, and the jerking of the rope make it virtually
impossible to tell anything at all about the speech and, consequently,
emphasize the metaphysical absurdity of the entire performance. Lucky's speech
is an incoherent jumble of words which seems to upset Vladimir and Estragon,
for sporadically both rise to protest some element of the speech. Therefore,
the speech does communicate something to the two tramps or else they would not
know to protest. The form of the speech is that of a scholarly, theological
address, beginning "Given the existence . . . of a personal God,"
but it is actually a parody of this kind of address since the nonsensical and
the absurd elements are in the foreground and the meaningful aspects of it are
totally obscured, as is the God whom Lucky discusses. Here, we have a
combination of the use of scholastic, theological terminology along with the
absurd and the nonsensical. For example, the use of qua (a Latin term meaning "in
the function or capacity of") is common in such scholarly addresses,
but Lucky's repetition of the term as quaquaquaqua creates an absurd, derisive
sound, as though God is being ridiculed by a quacking or squawking sound.
Furthermore, the speech is filled with various academic sounding words, some
real words like aphasia (a loss of speech; here it refers to the fact that God
from his divine heights now has divine aphasia or a divine silence) and some
words like apathia or athambia which do not exist (even though apathia is
closely aligned to apathy and thus becomes another oblique comment on the
apathy of God in the universe). Other absurd terms are used throughout the
speech, and there is also a frequent use of words which sound obscene,
interspersed throughout the speech. As an example, the names of the scholars
Fartov and Belcher are obviously created for their vulgarity.
Therefore, the speech is filled with more
nonsense than sense — more that is illogical than that which is logical. If,
however, we remove the illogical modifiers, irrelevancies, and incomprehensible
statements and place them to the side. Lucky's speech is an attempt, however
futile, to make a statement about man and God. Reduced to its essence, the
speech is basically as follows: “acknowledging the existence of a personal
God, one who exists outside of time and who loves us dearly and who suffers
with those who are plunged into torment, it is established beyond all doubt
that man, for reasons unknown, has left his labors abandoned, unfinished.”
It is
significant that the speech ends at this point because man can make certain
assumptions about God and create certain hypotheses about God, but man can
never come to a logical conclusion about God. One must finish a discourse about
God, as Lucky did, by repeating "for reasons unknown . . . for reasons
unknown . . . for reasons unknown . . . ." And equally important is
the fact that any statement made about God is, by its nature, lost in a maze of
irrelevance, absurdity, and incoherence — without an ending. Therefore, man's
final comment about God can amount to nothing more than a bit of garbled noise
which contains no coherent statement and no conclusion. Furthermore, Lucky's
utterances are stopped only after he is physically overpowered by the others.
After the speech, Pozzo tiles to revive Lucky,
who is emotionally exhausted, completely enervated by his speech. After great
difficulty, Pozzo gets Lucky up, and amid protracted adieus, he begins to go,
albeit he begins to go the wrong way. Pozzo's inability to leave suggests man's
reliance upon others and his natural instinct to cling to someone else. But
with one final adieu, Pozzo and Lucky depart.
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4) Waiting for Godot as an Absurd Play"
Discuss Waiting for Godot as a play that has timeless universal appeal?
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