Days [ ) No longer young, Not yet old | Samuel Beckett, 1953

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Samuel Beckett 1920 1

Samuel Beckett, 1920

“To think, when one is no longer young, when one is not yet old, that one is no longer young, that one is not yet old, that is perhaps something. To pause, towards the close of one’s three hour day, and consider: the darkening ease, the brightening trouble; the pleasure pleasure because it was, the pain pain because it shall be; the glad acts grown proud, the proud acts growing stubborn; the panting the trembling towards a being gone, a being to come; and the true true no longer, and the false true not yet. And to decide not to smile after all, sitting in the shade, hearing the cicadas, wishing it were night, wishing it were morning, saying, No, it is not the heart, no, it is not the liver, no, it is not the prostate, no it is not the ovaries, no, it is muscular, it is nervous. Then the gnashing ends, or it goes on, and one is in the pit, in the hollow, the longing for longing gone, the horror of horror, and one is in the hollow, at the foot of all the hills at last, the ways down, the ways up, and free, free at last, for an instant free at last, nothing at last.”

Samuel Beckett, Watt, 1953

Also:
Book//mark – The Unnamable | Samuel Beckett, 1953
One evening | Samuel Beckett, 1929-89
Tangier / Samuel Beckett on Holidays | Photos by François-Marie Banier, 1978

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