Header Ads Widget

Responsive Advertisement

Reference to the context : waiting for Godot

 Explain the following with reference to the context.

     

        1.      There’s man all over for you, blaming on his boots the faults of his

feet. (He takes off his hat again, peers inside it, feels about inside it, knocks on

the crown, blows into it, puts it on again.) This is getting alarming. (Silence.

Vladimir deep in thought, Estragon pulling at his toes.) One of the thieves

was saved. (Pause.) It’s a reasonable percentage. (Pause.) Did you ever read

the Bible?

Answer: reference to the context :

This line has been taken from the first act of Drama, “waiting for Godot” by Samuel bracket. Waiting for Godot is a play by remarkable playwright “Samuel Beckett” which instead of having setting less setting, plotless plot,  actionless action and Truthless truth rises  Solemn and thought-provoking questions regarding the ‘plight of modern man" and the suffering as an essential part of human existence. an absurd play 'awaken compassion in spectator's sensibility for the character’ and instead of being empathetic towards two major characters, well Vladimir and Estrogen, the spectator becomes sympathetic and by viewing the sufferings of them feel themselves to be the part of their whole. So it can be said that the plight of the characters acts as a ‘unifying force' in the play. The greatest plight of modern man is absurdness and this absurdity come from the Crown of the creation.

Explanation:

Estragon sits on a mound under a leafless tree, unsuccessfully trying to remove his boot. Vladimir arrives and greets him as an old friend, learning that Estragon was beaten up, apparently again, as he slept. Vladimir also suffers, apparently from some ailment that involves groin pain and urinary symptoms. Estragon asks for help with his boot, but Vladimir ignores him and tries to remember a quote about "hope deferred" while looking for something in his hat. Estragon finally gets his boot off and seems to search it as well. Both find nothing.

Vladimir suggests that they repent, but they don't know what of—perhaps being born. Vladimir states that one of the two thieves crucified with Christ was saved, but according to only one of the four Gospels of the Bible. Why believe only that one? Confused and bored, Estragon suggests they go, but Vladimir reminds him they are waiting for Godot. Uncertain whether this is when and where they are supposed to wait, they examine the tree, debate the day of the week, and wonder if they waited here yesterday. During a lull, Estragon falls asleep. Vladimir soon wakes him because he is lonely but then refuses to hear about Estragon's nightmare or tell a story he requests. When Estragon persists, Vladimir leaves angrily. Estragon's first words in the play, "Nothing to be done," sum up the play as a whole: nothing meaningful ever happens, and nobody ever takes any meaningful action. At first, it seems Estragon is simply talking about his boot, but Vladimir's response that he is "beginning to come round to that opinion" but hasn't "yet tried everything" makes it a broader philosophical statement. "Nothing to be done" expresses a major theme of the play—life is essential without purpose. That doesn't stop the two men from holding out intermittent hope that they might find something worthwhile if they keep trying, or waiting. However, the fruitless searches of their hat and boot illustrate the folly of seeking meaning in life.

The characters are left purposely undefined. Vladimir and Estragon are described as shabby and no longer respectable, but they are never called tramps, as they are often depicted. Estragon is more in tune with bodily concerns—pain, hunger, and the senses. His boots are his primary prop, showing his more grounded nature. He has intuitive insights, such as understanding that the lighter person must hang himself first, but he has great difficulty expressing his ideas in words. Vladimir is more intellectual and philosophical, examining big ideas, which Estragon has trouble understanding.

 

 

 

 

I was going down today, but I'm...I'm waiting for the weather to break.    

Post a Comment

0 Comments