
[1591] And now my progress, at all times slow and
painful, was so more than ever, because of my
short stiff leg, the same which I had so long which had so long seemed to me as
regarded
stiff as a leg could be, to my [xxxxxxxxx] inexperience,
[1591] for it now grew stiffer than ever, x a thing
which I should not have thought possible,
and at the same time shortene grew daily shorter,
but above all because of the other leg, which
now also rapidly stiffened, it supple so long,
but did not yet shorten, unfortunately.
[1592] For
when the two legs shorten at the same time, and
at the same rate, things are not so bad.
[1593] But
when one shortens, while the other remains station-
ary, then there is some cause for worry.
[1594] Not that I
worried exactly, no, but I was bothered.
[1595] For
I didn't know on which foot to come down,
between one hop and the next.
[1596] Let us try and
[xxx xxx xxx xxx] elucidate this dilemma.
[1597] [xxx] The [tender] leg The tender leg was the one
[xxx] already stiff, there is no denying that,
and it was the other [xxx] that habitually
took my weight when I landed.,[⁁] [ADDITION]Addition on page
78rand supported me, until I was ready to proceed.
[1602] It must not be be forgotten either that having a one
bad leg and then another more or less sound [then 1 bad] one more or less good leg, I
was able was able to rest the former, and reduce its
sufferings to a minimum, by [avoid] never using
it, but only the latter, thanks to my crutches.
[1603] But this [xx] expedient was now no longer
possible!
[1604] For I no longer had one bad leg and the
other more or less sound one more or less good leg, but now both were bad.
[1605] And the worse, to my way of feeling, was that which
up to then had been sound good, that is to say relatively
sound good, and to [which det] the deterioration of which
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Molloy © 2016 Samuel Beckett Digital Manuscript Project.
Editors: Magessa O'Reilly, Dirk Van Hulle, Pim Verhulst and Vincent Neyt