Waiting for Godot
By: Samuel Becket
Summary of
the Play:
Waiting for Godot is a play in two acts. Act I
begins on a country road by a tree. It is evening. Estragon, an old man, is
sitting on a low mound trying to remove his boot. Vladimir, another old man,
joins him. They begin to chat.
They have apparently known each
other for years. Once perhaps respectable, they are now homeless, debilitated,
and often suicidal. They wonder out loud why they did not kill themselves years
ago; they consider the possibility of doing it today. They are waiting for
someone they call “Godot”. While they wait, they share conversation, food, and
memories.
Two other elderly men, Pozzo and
Lucky, arrive on the scene. It is clear that Pozzo is the master, and Lucky is
the slave. Upon command, the slave dances and thinks out loud for the
entertainment of the others, until he is forcibly silenced.
After Lucky and Pozzo depart, a
boy arrives. He tells Estragon and Vladimir that Godot will not be there today,
but will be there tomorrow. He leaves, and they continue to wait.
The second act is almost the same
as the first. The tree has sprouted leaves, Estragon and Vladimir chat while
they wait for Godot, and Pozzo and Lucky arrive again. This time, Pozzo is
blind and helpless, and Lucky is mute.
After some interaction, Pozzo and
Lucky leave, and the boy arrive. He has the same message as before. Godot will
be there tomorrow. Estragon and Vladimir are left to wait as before.
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