-
- Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot: "nothing happens, nobody
comes, nobody goes, it’s awful."
- When the play first opened, it was criticized for lacking meaning,
structure, and common sense. These critics, however, failed to see that Beckett
chose to have his play, Waiting for Godot, capture the feeling that the
world has no apparent meaning. In this misunderstood masterpiece, Beckett
asserts numerous existentialist themes. Beckett believed that existence is
determined by chance. This basic existentialist tenet is first asserted in
Vladimir’s discussion of a parable from the Bible. Of the two thieves crucified
at the same time as Christ, one was saved and one was damned. Given this
knowledge, Vladimir ponders: "…how is it…that of the four Evangelists only one
speaks of a thief being saved. The four of them were there - or thereabouts -
and only one speaks of a thief being saved….Of the other three, two don’t
mention any thieves at all and the third says that both of them abused
[Christ]….But all four were there." The reports of the Evangelists shows that
probability determines human life. That each Evangelist speaks of a different
fate for the thieves prove the role of chance in our existence. It is generally
accepted that one thief was saved and another one damned, which further
illustrates the probability of life. In addition, Beckett expands on this
paradox by stating, "Do not despair; one of the thieves was saved. Do not
presume; one of the thieves was damned." Because fate is determined by chance,
there is nothing anyone can do to insure their savior. In the play, it is stated
that Godot himself beats the minder of sheep but cherishes the minder of goats.
The arbitrariness of Godot’s decisions elude to the arbitrariness of life
itself, raising questions over who will be saved and who will be damned. In the
play, Pozzo remarks about his fate in comparison to Lucky’s: "Remark that I
might easily have been in his shoes and he in mine. If chance had not willed it
otherwise." In Stoppard’s play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead,
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern flip a coin that escapes the natural laws of
reason. Here, the existentialist viewpoint focuses on refuting probability in
favor of chance.
- To many people, Godot symbolizes God. The name Godot even reflects an
attenuated version of the word God. Godot’s silence but ubiquitous presence
resembles that of God’s, and Vladimir and Estragon’s helplessness mirrors our
own frailty. Vladimir and Estragon wait for Godot, hoping that he will give them
meaning, help them find answers to their questions, and that he will save them
from their situation. Many critics have argued that Godot does not necessarily
symbolize God, merely "the objective of our waiting - an event, a thing, a
person, a death."
- Another basic existentialist tenet on which Beckett reflects is the
meaninglessness of time. Because past, present, and future mean nothing, the
play follows a cyclic pattern. Vladimir and Estragon return to the same place
each day to wait for Godot and encounter the same basic people each day. Pozzo
and Lucky pass by Vladimir and Estragon one day, both in healthy states, and
return the next day, one blind and the other mute. Pozzo cannot recollect the
previous meeting, and even claims that Lucky has always been mute. In changing
Pozzo and Lucky’s situation, Beckett shows that time’s meaninglessness degrades
human life to the point of being equally unpurposed. Likewise, Godot’s messenger
does not recognize Vladimir and Estragon from day to day. This suggests that the
people we meet today are not the same as they were yesterday and will not be the
same tomorrow. Stoppard investigated this concept by confusing the identities of
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. They often could not tell the difference between
themselves, offering further evidence on the uncertainty of life.
Beckett also examines Sartre’s description of "bad faith" self-deceptive
attempts to dodge reality by making excuses for one’s actions. Vladimir and
Estragon fool themselves by engaging in petty discourse that reflects the
absurdity of life. They even contemplate suicide numerous times for numerous
reasons, but ultimately persist in the futility of life. They choose to wait,
just as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern submit to the futility of their own lives
and merely await death.www.wshs.fcps.k12.va.us/academic/english