Digital Manuscript ProjectFootfalls / Pas

[0208] (Pause.) [0209] Slip out and into the little church by the south
door, always closed locked at that hour, and walk up and down,
the corresponding arm up & down, His poor arm. [0210] (Pause.) [0211] Sometimes she would
halt, as one frozen by some motion phantom of the mind, and
stand stock still till she could move on again pass on move again.. [0212] But
many also were the evenings when the pacing continued unbroken, till she vanished she paced without pause up & down, up & down, before vanishing
the way she had come.
[0213] (Pause.) [0214] No sound of course. [0215] (Pause.) [0216] None at least to
be heard. [0217] (Pause.) [0218] The appearance semblance? [0219] (Pause. [0220] Begins
pacing. [0222] After one 2 lengths halts facing front at LR.
[0223] Pause.) [0228] Grey rather than white, [0224] Faint, but by no
means invisible, in a certain light. [0225] (Pause.) [0226] Given Granted the right light. [0227] (Pause.) [0228] Grey
rather than white, a light shade of grey. [0229] (Pause.)
[0230] Ragged Tattered. [0231] (Pause.) [0232] A tangle of rags tatters. [0233] (Pause.) [0234] A faint
tangle of pale grey rags tatters. [0235] (Pause.) [0236] Watch it - (Pause.)
[0236] Watch her pass before a the candelabrum, how the its flames,
their light of the flames...like moon through passing cloud.
[0236|001] (Pause.) [0236|002] Or mist. [0237] (Pause.) [0238] Thus not long soon then hafter having
gone, as though never been there, began to walk, along the [⁁]up & down, up & down,
south transept, up and down, at nightfall.His that poor arm. [0239] (Pause.) [0240] At nightfall. [0241] (Pause.)
[0241|001] Nightfall. [0241|002] (Pause.) [0242] That is to say, at certain seasons
otf the year, during evensong Vespers. [0243] (Pause.) [0244] Necessarily.
[0245] (Pause. [0246] Starts pacing. [0247] After 1 length Halts facing front after four steps at L.
[0248] Pause.) [0249] Mrs Winter, whom the reader will remember,
Mrs Winter, one autumn Sunday evening, on sitting down
with her daughter to supper with her daughter after
worship, after a few half-hearted mouthfuls laid down
her knife and fork and bowed her head. [0249|001] (Pause.) [0250] What
is it, Mother, said the daughter, a very strange girl,
though scarcely a girl any more...(Brokenly.)
[0250] Dread-
fully unhappy -... [0251] (Pause. [0252] Normal voice.) [0253] What is it, Mother, are
you not feeling yourself? [0255] Mrs W (doubleyoo) did not at once reply.
[0256] But finally, raising her head and fixing Emily Amy - the
daughter's given name, as the reader will remember -
fixing Emily Amy full in the etye, she said - (pause) -
she murmured, Emily Amy, did you notice anything ... strange unusual strange in at evensong? [0257]
church this eveningEmily Amy: No, Mother, I did not.
[0258] Mrs W: Perhaps it was just my fancy. [0259] Emily Amy: Just what
exactly, Mother, did you perhaps fancy it was? [0260] (Pause.)
[0261] Just what exactly, Mother, did you perhaps fancy it
was you saw noticed. [0263] Mrs W: You noticed nothing unusual strange?
[0264] Emily: No, Mother, I did not, to put it mildly. [0265] Mrs W:
[0265] Mrs W: What do you mean, Emily, to put it mildly, what
can you possibly mean, Emily, to put it mildly? [0266] Emily Amy:
I mean, Mother, that to say I noticed nothing unusual strange is
indeed to put it mildly. [0267] For I noticed nothing of any
kind, unusual strange or otherwise. [0268] I saw nothing, heard nothing,
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Footfalls / Pas © 2022 Samuel Beckett Digital Manuscript Project.
Editors: James Little and Vincent Neyt