Digital Manuscript ProjectL'Innommable / The Unnamable

[0820] But what where my
own feelings at this time,[0821] what was I thinking
of?[0822] With what?[0823] Was I having difficulty
with my morale?[0824] The answer to all that
is this, I quote Mahood, that I was
entirely absorbed by the business on hand
and not in the least concerned to know in what
precisely, or even approximately, it consisted.
[0825] [xxx xxx] The only problem for me was how
to continue, since I could not do otherwise,
to the best of my declining powers, in this the
motion that had been imparted to me.
[0826] This obligation, and the virtual impossibility
of fulfilling it, engrossed me in a purely
mechanical way, excluding notably the
free play of my intelligence & sensibility,
so that my situation rather resembled that
of an old broken-down bathorse [or cart] or
[0826]
carthorse cart or bathorse which neither its
instinct nor its observation can receive no
information either from the its instinct or its
[xxx] observation as to whether it is moving
moving towards the its stable or away from
it, and does not greatly care.
[0827] The question,
among others, of how such a [xxx of t]
a state of things is are possible had long since
ceased to interest me preoccupy me.
[0828] This
touching picture of my situation I found by
no means unattractive and as I recall it
I [wo] find myself wondering again if I
was not in fact the creature revolving in that
yard, as Mahood assured me.[0829] Well
supplied with painkillers I used them freely,
without however permitting myself the lethal
- Segments
L'Innommable / The Unnamable © 2013 Samuel Beckett Digital Manuscript Project.
Editors: Dirk Van Hulle, Shane Weller and Vincent Neyt