Samuel Beckett
Digital Manuscript Project
Malone meurt / Malone Dies

MS-TCD-4662

X
Segment 1

[0614] limp, drifting, th as though tossing on
the earth
tossed by the earth.
[0615] And when,
after a halt, he started off again,
x he was it was like a big thistle-down
snatched by the windsw from the place
where it had settled.

X
Segment 2

[0616] I have rum rummaged a little in
my belongings things, sorting them
out and pulling them over to me,
to have a good look at them.
[0617] I was
not far wrong in thinking that I knew
them well well, in my head [place = supralinear] by heart, and could
speak of them, at any moment, without
looking at.
[0618] But I wanted to make sure.

X
Segment 3

[0619] It was well I did. [0620] For now I know that
the image of these objects, with which I have
lulled myself until now, though though correct
accurate on the whole, was not completely
so.

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Segment 4

[0621] Now I should should be sorry to let slip
this unique occasion on which and the
possibilities which
which seems to offer me the
possibility of something suspiciously
like a st true statement of trut at last,
it would not be I would feel I had failed
in my duty.
[0622] I want this matter this matter to
free from all suspicions of approximation.

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Segment 5

[0623] I
want, when the great day comes, to be in a
position to announce clearly, without addition
or omission, all and x that its long
weary prelude prelude has brought me,
and left with me, in the way of material
goods.
[0624] It must be an obsession.

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Segment 6

[0625] I see now then that I had attributed
to myself certain objects which are no
longer in my possession, as far as I
can tell.
[0626] Might they not have rolled behind
a piece of furniture?
[0627] That would surprise
me.
[0628] A boot, for example, can a boot
roll behind a piece of furniture?

X
Doodle 6
Categories:
Shape, Diamond, Cross, Hatching
Transcription
  • Segments
  • Doodles