Life is occupied by waiting. In Waiting for Godot, Samuel Becket presents the suffering
of the human condition. Godot is about two beings who talk about nothing, experience the
drudgery of life, complain that they do not do anything, meet a few people, think about
hanging themselves, and then do it all over again. The existentialist style by Godot is
comparable to T.S. Eliot's works. Eliot's Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, and Hollow
Men are about the tormenting cycle of life and death. The connection among these three
works is that people want to and should do so much, but they do not.
Waiting for Godot takes place in a rural area, with just a tree in the background. The
two friends Vladimir and Estragon talk aimlessly and complain about life. They consider
hanging themselves, but realize before they do that they should consult with Godot. Who
or what Godot symbolizes remains a mystery, but their whole existence seems to be to wait
for Godot. They meet a couple of fellows: Pozzo, an upper-class man, mistaken by
Vladimir and Estragon as Godot, and Pozzo's slave, Lucky. After they leave, a messenger
from Godot arrives and states simply that Godot will arrive tomorrow, same place, same
time. They consider leaving, but do not. The second act is almost an exact repeat of
the first, but Lucky and Pozzo have fallen upon hard times. Pozzo has become blind and
pathetic, and Lucky has become dumb. This change in events is a direct point of life
being terrific one moment, and worthless the next. Godot never shows up. The play ends
with the two considering to go somewhere, but they do not.
The similarity of this play to Eliot's poem is remarkable. Eliot's Love Song is in the
first person point of view, and this person refers to "you," who is probably a woman. It
is about a man who want to do so much - be with pretty woman, make something of his life.
His flaws are many, though. He realizes he is getting balder and more wrinkled. His
prowess with women is deteriorating and this disturbs him. Life is going away and he is
no Prince Hamlet. So he does nothing, and that is the major flaw. He just lets life
suck everything from him and take away everything he could have done. Like in Godot,
there is so much that can be done, but an excuse is always found. Vladimir and Estragon
have to wait for Godot. Prufrock is too old, too good for nothing, so it is safer to
just do nothing. This aspect of the human condition of just going through the motions is
the easy way out, and both Beckett and Eliot want to illustrate that if one does not
live life to it's fullest, maybe one should not even live at all.
In Hollow Men, Eliot maintains that life is hollow, and death is inevitable. The cycle
from birth to death is just a natural process that does not matter and does not make a
difference in the large scheme of things. Hollow Men says life is just a wait for the
final destruction in which there is an endless succession of births and deaths. This
infinite sequence means nothing, since man will not find what he seeks. He is blind
physically and spiritual, and salvation is unattainable. Comparably to Godot, the
sequence of waiting is the theme. This eternal waiting is what makes the human condition
so deplorable and they also attest that existence is nonexistence.
The finality of life and the futility of it all is the tenor in Godot and T.S. Eliot's
work. Both deal with the frivolity of life, and the moral "being is suffering." The
message that appears from them is to do something with life, otherwise it will end up how
it started - nothingness.
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