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
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L'Innommable / The Unnamable © 2013 Samuel Beckett Digital Manuscript Project.
Editors: Dirk Van Hulle, Shane Weller and Vincent Neyt