Samuel Beckett 1906–1989
dublin, ireland
B
eckett was one of the greatest poets, dramatists, and novelists of the
twentieth century. A protégé of James Joyce, he took dictation for what
would become Finnegans Wake. One of the first absurdists to gain
international recognition, Beckett used only the most minimal of gestures and
words to portray the reality of human drama. His work consistently examined
failed communication between individuals—and the meaninglessness and su√er-
ing that result. In 1937 he moved to Paris, which remained his center after several
years of traveling throughout Europe. During the Resistance, he was in Rous-
sillon. He wrote most of his works in French, his adopted language; he possessed a
perfect ear for both English and French and was a well-known translator. In 1961
he won the Prix International des Éditeurs and in 1969 the Nobel Prize. Principal
works: Whoroscope, 1930; More Pricks Than Kicks, 1934; Murphy, 1938; Malone
meurt, 1951; Molloy, 1951; En attendant Godot, 1952; L’Innonmable, 1953; Watt, 1953;
Textes pour rien, 1958; All that Fall, 1959; Embers, 1959; Krapp’s Last Tape, 1959;
Comme c’est, 1961; Collected Poems in English and French, 1977.
Music of Indi√erence
music of indi√erence
heart time air fire sand
from the silence loves’ collapse
covers their voices and
let me no longer hear
myself keeping still
—mary ann caws
Dieppe
again the last ebb
the dead shingle
the turning then the steps
towards the lights of old
—samuel beckett