A SAMPLE OF SOME WORK

Monday, April 14, 2025

Brigitte Le Juez ( 1959- 2025) A Personal Tribute

 


Brigitte Le Juez
( 1959- 2025)
A Personal Tribute
I have only just yesterday become aware of the death of my former professor of comparative literature, Dr Brigitte Le Juez. Having disengaged with social media, I had lost contact with my former professor who had become a friend who I had known since I first met her in one of the cafes at DCU, where she lectured, back in 2011. This is my first memory of her, she had her back to me and she was speaking with some of the other students who would be studying for their MA in comparative literature like me. We were a small group of students, no more than seven if my memory serves me right.
I had a copy of Brigitte’s book, Beckett avant la lettre ( Grasset, 2007), in my hand which I had bought the year that it had come out, which was the year that I had just graduated and upon reading her book I had decided that if I were to do a Masters I would do it under her guidance, and so, here I was four years later standing in front of her with my copy of her book, which I placed down in front of her on the table. I wanted her to know that I was familiar with her work, and that is why I was there. Brigitte seemed a little taken aback, as she laughed in that very particular way of hers. Brigitte had a keen sense of humour, this is something that we both shared together. It became a kind of bond, both being fans of Beckett our sense of humour was kind of particular. Not exactly the usual, but, at the same time, fundamentally human.
I remember us speaking about the importance of having a sense of humour and particularly in relation to academia and academics in general. Brigitte spoke about one of her former lecturers in the École Normal Supérieure who had made a great impression on her, and one of the reasons she told me that she liked him so much was because he had a sense of humanity, and having a sense of humour was a big part of that. This is something that we both shared, very much. In fact, most of the writers that we admired, Beckett of course being one, had a great sense of humour. This was a particular quality that we looked for in them, the comic element. As it was what made them human.
Raymond Chandler was another writer that we both admired very much, and it was the fundamental humour of the man and his writing that, once again, attracted us both to him and his work. In fact, my last memory of Brigitte is when she called out to my apartment in Skerries to have lunch with my family in June, 2018. June the 15th, to be exact. I know that this is the right date as I asked her to sign my copy of Beckett avant le lettre which I had forgotten to ask her to do back in November, 2011. Knowing my love of Chandler, Brigitte had gifted me a beautiful first edition of a biography of the author by Tom Williams. She loved the movie, The Big Sleep, and we spoke about it on a number of occasions and upon giving me the biography of Chandler she told me that she thought that I might like the insights into Chandler that the biographer had uncovered.
Chandler, of course, like Beckett, was a very colourful character. He liked to drink, and wasn’t exactly known for his political correctness. This, again, is something that Brigitte and I shared. You must remember, the world of academia, when I first met her almost fifteen years ago, was already pretty much in the grip of political correctness, and this is something that we both felt rather uncomfortable with, in the end. Literature is a human science, and humour is an incredibly important aspect to exposing human failures. This is why you had the tragic and comic masks to represent the dual nature of man and which were the sign of the theatre; man, since the time of the ancient Greeks, had both a tragic and a comic nature. These twin masks, according to Beckett himself, were equally represented by the two ancient Greek philosophers Democritus, the laughing philosopher, and Heraclitus, the weeping one. The latter was to become very important to me, as after I graduated, in 2013, Brigitte helped me to prepare for my first ever academic presentation which took place in UCD on the 3rd of August.
I was having difficulty focusing on the subject, I remember, and Brigitte had agreed to meet up with me over a coffee in order to give me a little direction as to how I show approach my presentation. I shall always remember what she said to me that day. Heraclitus had to be like the sun upon which all the other topics which came up in my presentation had to gravitate around like the planets in our own universe. It was a very apt analogy, and of course this was so typical of Brigitte. She was aware of Heraclitus and the sign of fire, the Heraclitean element par excellence. So, she chose the fiery planet, the one which generated the most heat and fire, the one which was central to our universe. The Heraclitean planet par excellence…the Sun!
Well, I gave my presentation. It was a memorable day for me, so much so that I even wrote a short novella, More Micks than Dicks and which Brigitte was kind enough to help me launch in The Palace Bar, in 2017. Heraclitus was, once again, the main protagonist apart from Beckett in my novella, and Brigitte did a wonderful thing as she managed to trace, in that forensic way of hers, the first appearance of Heraclitus back in the writings of Samuel Beckett. She knew that this was a topic that was very dear to me, and so she went out of her way to bring me back this bit of knowledge to which I could add to my existing stockpile. It wasn’t the first time that she had supported me in this way. As she had equally helped me launch my first real collection of poetry, The Dark Pool, two years earlier as part of Donkey Shots a poetry festival that I had organised in the spring of that year.
I was quite sick at the time, I was also unemployed and things were not easy. Having worked in education, like Brigitte, for over ten years (we were actually working colleagues for a year in DCU the year that I eventually obtained my Masters, in 2013) and suffered a complete physical and mental break down, what is called ‘burn out’. I don’t know to what extent Brigitte was aware of my declining physical and mental health at the time, but what I do know is that when I asked her if she would write the preface for my book, she did so without hesitation and she wrote me a preface in both English and French that I remain extremely proud of to this day. You see, Brigitte had an intellectual honesty about her when it came to literature particularly. Despite her good sense of humour, Brigitte was no fool, and she did not suffer fools. She had an iron discipline, as any of her former students will testify to. She did not enjoy making fools of people, she let them do that all by themselves. But, whenever someone was being annoyingly foolish, egotistical say, Brigitte had a very gentle yet firm manner of letting them know when they should remain silent.
She had a dual nature, I suppose and it was not one or another but rather it was altogether more than that, it was syncretic. Nietzsche was at pains to point this out whenever he spoke about Heraclitus, as it is the most common error people make when they are referring to the pre-Socratic thinker. As people who do not fully understand him tend to think about him in a categorical way, which of course is an Aristotelian notion. How can you think categorically about a pre-Socratic thinker? No, you had to think in an altogether other way about him, as he did not think categorically. He thought about of things being in a permanent state of being, in other words in simple aspect if you will, but only as in eternal flux, so a continuous flow of BEING eternal. This is what I mean by syncretic. This is a very difficult thing to think about, as we live in a post-Aristotelian world, but if you wish to really get an understanding of the way in which Heraclitus thought, you had to make the very considerable effort to do so and not fall into lazy habits or practice.
This is what Brigitte taught me as a teacher and as a human, I would say. I want to just end on parrots, as Brigitte Le Juez loved parrots. She once gave a presentation about Elizabeth Bowen and how she viewed writers as nothing more than highly skilled parrots. Brigitte loved animals and nature in general. But, parrots were her favourite bird. And so, when I came across her article on parrots in Beckett, I was very excited. As this theme seemed to embody so much so the very spirit of Brigitte. In this article, she was particularly interested in the parrot in Molloy, Beckett’s first real novel in French ( 1951), and perhaps his greatest. I particularly love Molloy, I have just completed a 6000 word article on how it is a Heraclitean novel, which if it is ever published I promise I will dedicate to Brigitte. But, to get back to the parrot. Let me leave you with Beckett’s own words, as they will tell you a lot about Brigitte’s humour and why she loved so much animals and literature, and why she thought that all writers were but exalted parrots in the end.
Il ne disait de temps en temps, Putain de conasse de merde de chiason.
Il avait dû appartenir à Lousse. Les animaux changent souvent de
propriétaire. Il ne disait pas grand’ chose d’autre. Si, il disait aussi,
Fuck! Peut-être qu’il l’avait trouvé tout seul, ça ne  m’étonnerait pas.
Lousse essayait de lui faire dire, Pretty Polly! Je crois que c’était
trop tard. Il écoutait, la tête de côté, réfléchisait, puis disait, Putin de
conasse de merde de chiason.[1]


[1] Beckett, Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Les Éditions de Minuit, Paris, 2002.

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Coalition of the Willing... !!!


 

The more I listen to and see news reports broadcast on multi-media platforms these days, the more often than not a certain phrase or even theory surfaces in my mind and which I typically formulate into a rhetorical question that I pose to myself, which is; could not the war in Ukraine be described as a ‘Woke’ War, or if you prefer a war which was brought about, in part, due to ‘Woke’ ideas?

What exactly do I mean by this? I hear you ask, perhaps intrigued, a little, and certainly perplexed!

I should frame all of this, by the way, with the image of the British Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, in my mind, as his bespectacled face is plastered all over the front pages of both the mainstream British and Irish media, yet again.

I must say, before I continue any further, have you ever seen a more ‘Woke’ looking Prime Minister in your life, other than Keir Starmer? I suppose, I am referring  to the constant pose of self-righteous indignation that Mr Starmer is constantly adopting in the chambers of the House of Commons, or when he is standing behind rostrums, what a century for rostrums!, as he faces down the world’s press…!

And to be honest with you. I am done. I have had enough of it, I tell you. “The Coalition of the Willing”. Where have I heard this expression before? Oh yes, I remember, once again it was New Labour, in the guise of poodle, once again, to Geroge Bush’s response to the tragedy that was the ‘Twin Towers’ debacle which launched this disaster of a twenty first century back on the 11th, September, 2001.

Do you remember where you were, exactly? I certainly do, working on a split shift in the bar of a hotel on Baggott Street in Dublin, playing Randy Newman’s Sigmund Freud’s Impersonation of Albert Einstein in America while I watched the fallout of the event on the television screen in the lounge with the office workers who had staggered into the bar in an attempt at trying to comprehend what was happening; a lot of whom would have had family members, cousins, friends working in New York at the time, and who knows, even in the Twin Towers themselves…!

We were all moved, it was unforgettable what had happened. This was our JFK moment. I still remembered where I was when Elvis had died. You see, we all grew up with America, the USA. As they, the United States of America, were in fact…us. That is what the US actually meant to people worldwide. Us. Russians, Italians, Irish, Jews, Muslims…we were all concerned at what was taking place as we all felt a little part of us had died that day. There was the translation of a poem by Saadi Youssef and that was published in The Guardian newspaper, back then when it was still an actually newspaper as opposed to some propaganda rag bought off and paid for by the status quo, that summoned up everything that we felt; this now was when the atrocious government of Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, the Tweddle  Dumb and Tweedle dee of the Neo-Con global wrecking corporation.

I hated that pair as much as I detest Keir Starmer today, for it is the same eternal BS. The Coalition of the Willing, this is the exact same horse shit phrase that Tony Blair and George W. Bush used to justify their abominable war against Iraq, and which was built on a lie, and which is the single most cause, I would say, of the total fundamental mistrust of the entire world in regards to the credibility of the west. Everyone knew it was bullshit then, and so….

Here we are again! Another Labour mug, this time bespectacled; he has been described as the most hated British prime minister in his own lifetime, and he hasn’t even served a full year!

And why is that? Why do you think that Keir Starmer is the most hated British Prime Minister ever, in his own lifetime?

The mendacity of the man. The MOTM. He so believes his own lies…This is the full horror. I mean, say what you like about Bush and Blair, and the other pair, but I think the one thing that separates them all from Starmer is that, at least speaking for the Americans, whatever about Blair, they didn’t really believe their own lies. They were arrogant, conceited even, and awfully so. God how I hated them at the time… Kissinger’s boys. It was his phrase they were using after all. They lived and breathed Kissinger.

But this Starmer fella, he’s from a totally different school. Jesus, what a shmuck!...    

  


Sigmund Freud's Impersonation of Albert Einstein in America

 

Monday, March 3, 2025

How It Has Been and Continues to Be With How It Is/ Comment C’est by Samuel Beckett, A Novelist’s Perspective


How It Has Been and Continues to Be

With How It Is/ Comment C’est

by Samuel Beckett,

A Novelist’s Perspective

 Peter O’Neill

 

I will always remember reading the opening two paragraphs of Comment c’est / How It Is for the very first time, I had had an old Éditions de Minuit version which I had brought back with me from Paris where I had been living from 1989 to 1995. That first year in Paris, just before he died that Christmas, I remember travelling on the public transport systems, particularly when travelling through the inner city, quite terrified that I would ever meet the almost mythic writer. I hadn’t even really attempted to read the book back then as I was still struggling to read Molloy and I knew that Comment C’est was a work that was way beyond me, so I had put it aside for the day when I would be ready. Little did I realise that it wouldn’t be until 2012, when I was doing my Masters in Comparative Literature under the guidance of Brigitte Le Juez[1], that I would actually pick up the book again. That is a period of 23 years! I would then spend the next several years studying the text, I eventually presented two articles that I had written about it, the first in 2018, in Paris[2], and the second in 2019 in my hometown of Cork. I had been invited to present a third text at Reading University, at the Centre of Beckett Studies, but Covid put a stop to all of that and by the time I was  invited to participate online, the following year in 2021, I had moved onto another major influence, Charles Baudelaire.[3]

As you can see, my engagement with French literature, or let me rephrase that, Franco-Irish Literature has been lifelong and it has taken me to places and people that I would never have been given the opportunity to meet if I had not first started reading Molloy back in The Phoenix pub on the quays in Cork City, sometime back in the late eighties when Judy Hegarty Lovett and Conor, who later went onto form Gare Saint Lazre Players Ireland [4]  were, no doubt, also busy engaging with the works of Samuel Beckett. I should probably say something about Cork, the city where both Judy, Conor and I all grew up, back then, and how it was in the late eighties.

Firstly, pre-1989, the world was a very different universe, back then. The former Soviet Union was, of course, still in place and the Cold War was just about coming to an end. Allof this is very important to appreciate and understand. Think of the play Catastrophe ( 1982)which was dedicated to the Czech playwright Václav Havel and who was actually imprisoned by the communist regime that was working hand in glove with the Soviets who had taken over the country in the summer of 1968, after the so called Prague Spring protests which had been ongoing. Havel, a political dissident, had written a number of plays critical of the political situation in the country and had become even more politically active, which led to his imprisonment. So, the fact that Beckett was to write an entire play, Catastrophe, which treats the whole theme of censorship, and which was dedicated to Havel just goes to show how politically motivated Beckett was as a writer. But, when one considers his involvement with the French Resistance during the occupation of France, in WW2, and his subsequent flight to Roussillon ( 1942) with Suzanne Dechevaux-Dumesnil, his life-partner, and where he remained until the end of the war, one can hardly be too surprised at the political aspect of his writing[5].     

 Cork, at the time, was a very poor place having been hit very hard by recession and Unemployment, something about the dark and shabby world that Beckett’s prose and plays evoked easily resonated with us back then. Of course, we all had to emigrate as there was nothing but despair for us in the Republic of Ireland back in the nineteen eighties, and this too, emigration, is a common theme of the early Beckett, think of his novel Murphy ( 1938) which portrays a typical Irish bohemian living in exile in the UK, surrounded by fellow migrants who, like him, are trying to eke out and existence. 


To be continued..  



[1] Le Juez, Brigitte: Beckett avant la lettre, Chez Grasset, 2007.

I bought a copy of this work when it first came out in 2007, I had just graduated ( I majored in philosophy as an Oscail student where I encountered the philosopher, Cyril McDonnell, author of Heidegger’s Way Through Phenomenology to the Question of the Meaning of Being: A Study of Heidegger’s Philosophical Path of Thinking from 1909 to 1927, Verlag Köenigshausen-Neumann, 2015.) and on reading Brigitte Le Juez’ s work I made the decision to do my MA with her eventually in 2011-12 in Dublin City University, it was a part time course and I eventually graduated in 2013. I delivered my first presentation on Beckett on the 3rd August, 2013, in University College Dublin, Joyce’s old university and this experience formed the basis for my first novella, More Micks than Dicks, 2017.

https://www.ucd.ie/t4cms/Beckett%203%20programme.pdf

https://www.amazon.in/More-Micks-Than-Dicks-Beckettian/dp/0955685796

 

[3] I was invited by the Alliance Francaise in Dublin to organise and host the bicentenary celebrations for the birth of Charles Baudelaire.

http://web.alliance-francaise.ie/newsletter/april21.htm

 

[5] There have been many essays and books written about Beckett’s political outlooks and engagement, Hugh Kenner’s very eloquent and insightful interpretation of Waiting for Godot, in which he grounds the so called-abstraction of the events taking place to the very empirical reality of life under the Gestapo in occupied France in which Beckett experienced at first hand, is one of the most revelatory, in my opinion.

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xH92D2EwvZA

 


Monday, February 24, 2025

Translation Discussion with Linda Morales Caballero at Barnard College, Columbia Univeristy, New York.


 

Here's a lovely surprise, the New York based Peruvian poet and short story writer Linda Morales Callabero will be in discussion with John Burns and Miguel Falquez Certain in Barnard College, Columbia University, as part of the Bridging Voices series, that's on the 6th March, my daughter's birthday!

I am really happy about this as Linda will be, time allowing, discussing the work she did on part of my Eroica Variations which was published some years ago on 

https://nuevayorkpoetryreview.com/Nueva-york-Poetry-Review-3191-93-poesia-irlandesa-peter-oneal-


Sunday, February 23, 2025

German Elections, February 23rd, 2025.

 

Reflections on Woke, War and Multipolarity


 

In the following article, as its title suggests, I would like to put down some of my thoughts on the current war that is still ongoing in Ukraine and other closely related issues such as the culture war in the west, the so -called phenomenon of “Woke”, and the rise of what the realists would call as the transition from a unipolar moment, basically US hegemony since the collapse of the Soviet Republic which symbolically can be represented by the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989, and the end of US hegemony and the rise of multipolarity and which could be signalled by the Russian take-over of Crimea in 2014 and which was then totally consolidated by the Russians when Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine on multiple fronts in 2022. Now, as I write, the current PROTUS, Donald J. Trump, (2025) who has once again been elected is in the process, along with the billionaire Elon Musk, of dismantling the so called ‘deep state’; US bureaucratic institutions such as USAid, which have mainly been involved in the origins of the current war as one of the main reasons for the Russian takeover of Crimea was a response to US led interference originating in Maidan, Kiev, ( 2014) the so called “Revolution of Dignity”, when, with the help of US billions the democratically elected pro-Russian president Vicktor Yanukovych was ousted and the puppet pro-western government led by Volodymyr Zelenski ( 2019- present) took over and which, according to the Russians, is the main reason for the Russian ‘Special Military Operation.’ The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, as far back as 2008, ( Berlin), accused the west of NATO expansionism, which had been floated by the then US president George W. Bush to include Ukraine.

Now, the problem would seem to be doubly compounded by the fact that so called mainstream western media, which has largely been in the paybook of politically lobbying, something American governmental institutions in the past noticed about the war in Vietnam, without public support it was impossible to achieve military victory, an incredibly vast pro-NATO propaganda policy has played out in the west, and continues to do so, so that anyone who dissents, at least during the Biden-Harris administration, was seen largely to be a pro-Russian dissenter and subject to cancellation, one of the great hallmarks of the so called cultural revolution that was also taking place with the financial backing of NGOS and so called quangos whose financial backing was simply limitless. The extent and nature of which is only becoming apparent now with the daily revelations by Musk’s DOGE team, it is now becoming abundantly clear how USAid was behind so many ‘regime change’ operations such as most recently the events in Georgia and Romania and which were clearly being alluded to by the current Vice President of the USA, J.D. Vance, when he addressed European leaders for the first time in Munich, February, 2025, accusing them, not Russia, of being the ‘real enemies of Democracy’ referencing cancelled elections and censorship.

Such events are truly revolutionary. As a sign of just how revolutionary they are, the current bilateral talks that are being held by the Russians and the Americans in Riyadh in Saudi-Arabia, are the first talks, a diplomat made mention to,[1] which have taken place outside of Europe, and which is a sign of Europe’s declining influence on the world stage, which has, of course, infuriated the leaders the UK, France and Germany. Indeed, Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron, both highly unpopular leaders in their respective countries and Olaf Scholz in Germany, as I write elections are taking place in Germany and the AFD, a the so called ‘far right’ alternative party, have been doing extremely well in the polls and who could cause a massive upset[2].

Indeed, so critical are the current German elections, they are actually taking place this morning ( 23/02/2025) as I write, that for the first time in my adult life I can actually say, without any fear of error, that I believe that this is the first time in my life that I am taking an interest in German political elections, as the repercussions of what will happen if the AFD are elected will mean the possible eventual demise of the EU, as it is one of the clear mandates that Alice Weidel and the AFD are going to the German people with. “Bureaucracy as opposed to democracy,” this has been one of the great slogans of Elon Musk over the past few days, as he wielded a chain saw at C-Pac, which had been given to him as a present from the Argentinian ‘far -right’ president, Javier Milei.

Of course another crucial figure to mention in all of this is the Hungarian populist prime minister, Viktor Orbán, who has been campaigning tirelessly for peace much to the annoyance of Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, indeed when Orbán, in his role of  President of the Council of the European Union, went to Moscow to meet with the president of Russia, Vladimir Putin, he was met with absolute condemnation in the entire western mainstream press, which only goes to show how much they were in the hands of the powers that be. Now that the Biden Harris administration, a hawkish neo-liberal administration that followed neo-con policies almost to the letter through mainly the guidance of former Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, former National Security Advisor, Jake Sullivan and in particular former Spokesperson for the United States Department of State, Victoria Nuland who will be forever remembered for her “Fuck the Eu” comment in relation to the whole Project Ukraine.

Well, Nuland’s sentiment, apparently, has been totally realised as they now face the embarrassment of being totally sidelined while negotiations take place outside the continent of Europe on the fate of a mainly European issue but which has of course world wide repercussions. As an Irish citizen, and so a citizen of Europe, I have been watching the events since February 22nd, almost three years to a day, with, as I say, a very keen eye on what will be taking place in Germany today as the effects, whatever the outcome may be, will have massive repercussions. On the one hand, if the current status quo is re-elected, what could the future bring, a possible prolongation of the Russian Ukrainian war with EU troops getting involved! This is a very real possibility and without US backing, Starmer in the UK is already talking about British troops on the ground and he is still guaranteeing Zelensky of NATO backing which US Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, has utterly rejected as the Russians conducted their whole ‘Special Military Operation’ in order to prevent such a thing form happening.

A final word on EU so called policy. It seems to me that the current situation of European leaders what could be described as a product of the whole ‘Woke’ phenomenon, that is to say entirely based on completely subjective notions of what in fact ‘Reality’ is, in other words ideological brainwashing, subjugated to some kind of unrealistic idealistic dream, rather than for realpolitik, that is to say, facing up to reality and what realist historians like John Mearsheimer would describe as ‘Spheres of Influence’. We all know that if the Russians had tried a similar stunt that the Americans instigated in Kiev in 2014, say in Mexico City, there would most certainly have been an American ‘Special Military Operation’ very similar to what has now tragically been going on in Ukraine for the last three years. My final assessment, I only hope that the whole Eu experiment, that started really in earnest with the introduction of the Euro on 1/01/1999, will come to an end soon and that Elon Musk, will do the same job that he is doing on the former US bureaucratic system to the current disaster in Brussels as a continuation of the current EU regime, as deeply corrupt and blind sighted, is simply unthinkable.               



[1] Most of the information that I have gathered together here is coming from a network of independent sources which I have found on non-traditional media outlets and in particular YouTube. Please see the bibliography that I will attach at the end of this article for a comprehensive list of my main sources.

[2] Alice Weidel, the Alternative for Germany leader, and Chancellor candidate, in a recent interview for Bloomberg, see link below, on multiple occasions interrupts the interviewer when he labels AFD as a ‘far right’ party, by emphasising, as a former employee of Goldman Sachs, she is, rather, a ‘sensible conservative’ echoing Donald Trump’s ‘common sense’ approach to public policies, and particular when they are talking about energy, immigration and identity politics.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IeYB_Hmsu84&t=573s

 


Wednesday, February 12, 2025

The “Head Fuck!” Contradiction as Systematic Thinking Or, The Heraclitean Principal as Reflexive Mechanism in Part 2 of Samuel Beckett’s novel Molloy


 

The “Head Fuck!”

Contradiction as Systematic Thinking

Or,

The Heraclitean Principal as Reflexive Mechanism in Part 2 of

Samuel Beckett’s novel Molloy

 

J’ai toujours eu la manie de la symétrie.[1]

 

The rather pompous title of this article is a kind of piss take on academic titles, in general, though particularly concerning Beckett. I have long since abandoned any ideas of trying to be a ‘respected’ figure in the Beckett domain, I last presented a paper at an academic conference on the author at the request of Gare Saint Lazare Players Ireland in their, and mine, hometown of Cork, [2]in 2019. I subsequently moved onto researching the novels of Louis Ferdinand Céline, and this is the first text by Beckett that I have reread in over six years. I have already treated the appearance of Heraclitus in Beckett’s work[3] and so to find myself returning to the pre-Socratic philosopher, a favourite of the author’s, is simply a labour of love. I will be referencing the duo of Nietzsche, Heidegger with respect to the ‘Obscure’ one, just to add to the overall fun. The basic premise of the article is that as in all Beckett’s novels, the main protagonists, Molloy and Moran, rather than just representing two individuals in their own right, actually seem to embody more the ideas of two philosophical systems; Moran the rather rationalist perspective of Cartesian philosophy and Molloy almost a stand in for Diogenes in his tub. However, there is a crisis in the novel when the two characters meet, and there point of intersection, I propose, is the figure of Heraclitus symbolized in the climatic section of the novel when Moran/Molloy lights a fire to illuminate the dark wood!       

 

Il est minuit. La pluie fouette les vitres. Je suis

calme. Tout dort.[4]

 

So begins part 2 of Molloy, which has always been my favourite piece of writing by Beckett, and which is mirrored in a parallel text in the negation in the final paragraph of the text;

 

Alors je rentrai dans la maison, et j’écrivais,

Il est minuit. La pluie fouette les vitres. Il

n’était pas minuit. Il ne pleuvait pas[5].

 

Jean- Jacques Mayoux, in his essay published in the Collection “double” edition[6] and which I am referencing in this article, makes the same point when he states how the spatialization in Molloy is an interior space as opposed to a geographical one and it is this very peculiar strain that the author constantly mines, Mayoux insists, and which creates the very radical and specific atmosphere that readers and theatre goers worldwide have long since come to be familiar with whenever they read a novel or attend a play by the author, and which has even come to be known as “Beckettian” just as we may also describe a scene as being Kafkaesque, such is the force or impression that the overall mood and atmosphere, helped by an all too familiar assortment of props ( bicycles, umbrellas and bowler hats and other outlandish wear in the case of Molloy) and what I would describe as the all too familiar point – counter point, or systematic contradiction, that is also at play in Beckett’s work and particularly here in part two of Molloy, and which I now wish to treat at length here.

Before I begin, I would just like to underline the point that Mayoux makes above, as it Underscores everything that will follow. So, the singularity of Beckett’s writing, according to Mayoux, and to which I am in total agreement, is the fact that Beckett the author is not making any references outside the text, in other words to Life itself, and particularly his own. Mayoux puts it very well;

Par horreur de la fiction réaliste, Beckett saisit

toute occasion de souligner que non seulement

le « je » du personnage n’empêche pas que c’est

lui qui écrit, mais encore que l’écriture, loin de

constituer l’instrument d’un récit , est sans cesse

un arrangement des mots, une disposition du langage

en vue d’un agrément de lisibilité ou de cohérence :

« je me mis à genoux, non ça ne va pas, je me mis

pas debout ».[7]

 

Mayoux then goes on to state that this state of affairs, this complete fiction, as it were, grants Beckett the author complete authority over his ‘fictional’ world and, as Mayoux demonstrates, allows him to change ideas, almost at every whim, so that the reader’s perception, immersed as it is in an otherwise total simulacrum of so called ‘real world’ – Reality -  that it is disconcertingly real, as it were. What one might vulgarly describe in Beckett’s native Dublin as a “Head Fuck!”

Now, there has, so far, been whole forests of so- called literature written already about the content of the aforementioned “Head Fuck!” and I, for one, am not going to entertain them here. What in the name of God would be the point? None whatsoever! No, what I merely propose here is to possibly elaborate a little more on the very reflexive, and so systematic, reasoning that embodies the whole fictional world that the author conjures up. For, Molloy being a parallel text, as Mayoux asserts, in the sense that Molloy is a mirror copy of Moran and vice versa. In this sense, Molloy is rather akin to Finnegans Wake in that one can embark, nay must, on a circular reading, and in this sense it is a book without end. Part 1 being a contradiction of part 2, as it were. The author is not joking when he says that he has a passion for symmetry.

Before I go any further, I think that it is perhaps the appropriate moment to introduce the prime mover that is behind the present text, and that is Heraclitus of Ephesus, otherwise known as ‘the Obscure’. Now, the reason he comes up so much in reference to Beckett in any of the pieces that I happen to write is quite simple. Firstly, because, as far as I know, nobody else brings him up! This is a reason in itself, and secondly, because, and it is a point which I have been making since I first presented my ideas in a public forum about Beckett since 2013 and it is also the substance of my only published book to date on Beckett, More Micks than Dicks ( 2017)[8], Heraclitus is a constant point of reference for Beckett throughout his entire literary career.[9]

Of course, the philosophical constellation that Heraclitus creates, his system of thinking, in the fragments that have been handed down has been the subject of discussion since 500BC, have been the source of constant discussion of which Beckett’s contribution is but a continuation. Nietzsche, for example, Beckett’s contemporary by just a generation before,[10]held Heraclitus in the highest regard, we know this now as his lectures that he gave in the University of Basel between 1872 and 1876 have now been made available to us, and Heraclitus formed a very important place in the lectures that Nietzsche gave over those years.

For the purposes of this article uniquely, I should like to include the following note by Nietzsche, as I believe that in the context of the subject matter of Molloy and in particular in terms of contradictory statements, such as Jean Jacques Mayoux evokes in his essay already cited[11], this particular point highlighted by Nietzsche on the overall thinking of Heraclitus is extremely pertinent, as it offers a possible explanation into the deeper origins of the philosophical underpinnings that Beckett may have been tapping into, considering, as we have already mentioned, Beckett’s profound interest in Heraclitus, and philosophical thinking in general.

Well, this is the intuitive perception of Heraclitus: there is no thing

which we may say, “it is.” He rejects Being. He knows only Becoming,

the flowing. He considers belief in something persistent as error

and foolishness. To this he adds the thought: that which becomes

is one thing in eternal transformation, and the law of this eternal

transformation, the Logos in all things, is precisely this One, fire.[12]

 

It is certainly no accident that when Molloy encounters Moran in the forest it is when Moran has just lit a fire in the wood in the night. Fire, the Heraclitean element superlative as it is the element that is so symbolic, out of all the four, of the eternal flux that Heraclitus sees as being the only constant. Now, the symbolism of all of this cannot be more significant; here we have Molloy, the itinerant vagabond par excellence, attired in all his magnificent decrepitude, meeting his almost polar opposite, the bourgeois Moran, so meticulous and proud of his constant ‘method’, he is a system thinker but of the worst kind. No doubt Beckett’s piss take of the so called ‘Cartesian’ man. Anyone who has been to France will remark how French people will constantly say, when they are trying to explain something, “ Mais c’est logique!” How many times a day must Beckett have heard this phrase? It makes me smile just thinking about it. One can only imagine his face! For, if there is one thing that Beckett’s entire œuvre is almost at war with, it is this very same phrase and this is because Monsieur Beckett has more in common with Heraclitus than he has with Descartes, despite the fact that so many Anglo-Saxon commentators on Beckett write about his connection with the latter.

The section of the novel I should like to treat now is the section in the wood, woods, symbolically, have great importance in western literature being associated as they are with the wild unknown. Whether it is Grimm’s Fairytales or Dante’s Inferno, they are a very important trope in the western canon. Of course, Dante is a particularly important reference when we are discussing Samuel Beckett, as apart from James Joyce, no other writer had as much impact on Beckett as Dante Alighieri. The very first chapter of Beckett’s first novel, Dante and the Lobster ( 1934), a highly semi-autobiographic novel, portrays Belacqua[13], Beckett’s alter ego, going to and from his Italian class in Trinity College Dublin ( Beckett studied Italian and French and later went onto lecture there briefly) and Beckett’s tutor is seen helping the young scholar with the more difficult passages of Dante’s Commedia.

 

Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita

mi ritrovai per una selva oscura,

ché la dirrita via era smarrita[14].

 

It is perhaps one of the most famous lines of Italian ever written, and I think that there can be absolutely no doubt that when Samuel Beckett, just a few years after the end of WW2, a war which he had seen and experienced at first hand in both occupied France, when he operated as a member of the French resistance in the Gloria cell in Paris, and from where he had to eventually flee to the south of France with his lifelong companion Suzanne Deschevuax ( 1900-1989), experiences, wandering throughout the French countryside during wartime which permeate throughout Beckett’s work, be it the lunar landscape of Godot or the countryside depicted in Molloy[15].

While the anxiety and horror of the wood in Dante are all too familiar with readers worldwide, particularly the scenes of the trees which cry out housing as they do the souls of the legion of suicides, readers of Molloy, like myself, will also be, no doubt, caught returning to the unforgettable scenes depicted in this most labyrinthian novel. As I have said before, I have read Molloy on  numerous occasions ever since I was a young man of 19, and, as I approach my 58th birthday this year, once again, I find myself seduced by its puzzle for this is what it is, like some design by the Dutch artist M.C. Escher. 

For example, before the fire scene which is certainly the climatic scene in Molloy when the two protagonists ( are they one in the same person, or are they actually two different characters?); Molloy the crippled halfwit who keeps us highly entertained in the first section whether he is abusing social welfare officers, parrots or his girlfriend, and Moran, the meticulous bourgeois agent who has been assigned the apparent missing person case with his son Jacques to find Molloy: meet in the wood. Well, just before they actually meet each other face to face, before the Heraclitean fire, a sudden change occurs with Moran, and not with Molloy. Everything up to this point, the constant contradictions in the rapport with his young teenage son, the stuff of high comedy as they are exactly the kind of thing that goes on between father’s and sons, at least teenage sons, and daughters, generally. This change is stated explicitly.

Et je me penchais aussi sur moi, sur ce qu’il y

avait de change depuis quelque temps en moi. [16]

 

Now, this, it appears to me, would be a very significant moment in the novel, as Moran up to now is a character that does everything like clockwork. We know this as when he decides to up and leave his beloved house with his son, this is an event that is so out of character that his maid, Marthe, is astonished by his behaviour.

 

Je sonnais Marthe et me recouchai. Nous dînerons

à la  maison, dis- je. Elle me regarda avec étonne-

ment. Ne dînions pas toujours a la maison ?[17]

 

Moran is so conscientiousness about habit and continuity that it is in fact a major aspect of the content of part 2 of the novel; he is, after all, a typical product of upper -middle class bourgeois society, the very antithesis of Molloy, the delinquent ‘clochard’ who has more in common with Diogenes in his tub than Moran’s Kant, as it were. The referencing of philosophical systems and thinkers is deliberate as Beckett, all his life, engaged in reading philosophical texts and thinkers, be they contemporary or ancient.[18]

This is why Beckett’s texts are of course profoundly interesting and have provoked so much discussion, as his the characters which people his novels, be they Belacqua, Murphy, Watt, Mercier & Camier, Molloy, Moran, Malone or Mahood, as well as embodying personalities tend also to embody philosophical points of view, and in Molloy, and in particular the scene in the wood just before Moran/Molloy light the fire, it is as if these two philosophies, or points of view converge. At this stage now, which is absolutely critical, now, I need to resort to evoking Martin Heidegger, yet again in reference to Heraclitus, as Heidegger, perhaps more than any 20th century thinker, barring perhaps Wittgenstein, was the most obsessed with the particular problem that Beckett seems to be attempting to engage with in Molloy, and which is ultimately an existential one as it is concerned, Beckett’s novel Molloy, with nothing less than human identity itself.

For Heidegger, as for Beckett, the problem for the most part is the problem with language itself, both men had enormous difficulties with language. In this they are very alike, in many respects. Heidegger is of course famous for his use of the verb Dasein, being there in English, which he famously designates as a more reasonable linguistic sign to replace sein – being in English, to designate the human predicament, which is in itself a very Beckettian idea. For like Heraclitus, Heidegger does not believe in alternatively black and white states of being, when describing the human, as nothing simply ‘is’ when all is merely becoming.

 

the essence of the human shows itself transparently; or how,

in simple presence, the essence of the human reveals itself. To say nothing here of

the greeting of the gods, ( 88) there is everywhere a reciprocal unfolding- toward-

one -another of all ‘essences’ and, within that unfolding, appearance, in the sense of

the emanating self-showing. [19]

 

For Heidegger, just as for Heraclitus two and half thousand years before him, the problem is the way in which we discuss things as being, or are, from a merely causative evaluation. This is mere physics. One cannot, according to Heidegger/Heraclitus apply the laws of causality, or physics, when you are trying to discuss ontological concerns, in other words issues which concern BEING from an originary standpoint when you are trying to examine humans who are questioning their very identity, which is what Beckett would appear to be doing through the agent of the fictional characters Molloy/Moran in his novel Molloy.[20] For example, compare the following extract taken from the Moran’s ‘crisis’ just before he lights the fire to the above fragment from Heidegger/Heraclitus.

 

Mais comment décrire cette sensation qui de

sombre et massive, de grinçant et pierreuse, se fai-

sait soudaine liquide. Et je voyais alors une petite

boule montant lentement des profondeurs, à travers

des eaux calmes, unie d’abord, à peine plus claire

que les remous qui l’escortent, puis peu à peu visage

d’homme ou de femme, jeune ou vieux, ni si son

calme aussi n’est pas un effet de l’eau qui le sépare du

jour.[21]

 

The genius of Samuel Beckett, it seems to me, is that in Molloy he uses the genre of the quest novel, utilising his own experiences as a member of the resistance cell Gloria in occupied France during WW2, to create a kind of metaphysical whodunnit? As a murder, as in all sleuth detectives appears to have been committed. Or is it not rather an assault, at least? As Molloy at the start of the novel, is seen to be convalescing in bed after being hit on the head by Moran (?), which Beckett, the author of the novel refuses to describe, rather hilariously.

Let us now examine the particular moment when Moran and Molloy confront one another in the wood, just as Moran (or is it Molloy?) has lit the fire. But before we do, let us also remind ourselves that fire is a also a sign of illumination. It has a dual purpose for the wanderer who is lost in the wood, warmth and light and both are in turn metaphoric as they are literal; again, this is a very Nietzschean idea. So, after Moran has lit the fire, just after, he feels a hand on him. It is Molloy whom he begins to describe as he sees him by the light of the fire, and he has a lot to say in his description. Particularly about his outlandish state of dress, and then as if there can be any doubt as to whom he is describing exactly, there is this particular passage.

 

Il était coiffé d’un feutre bleu sombres à petits bords,

dans le ruban duquel il avait piqué un hameçon garni

d’une mouche de mai artificielle, ce qui faisait on ne peut

plus sportif. Vous m’entendez ? dit- il. Mais tout ca n’était

rien à côté du visage qui ressemblait vaguement, je le

regret de la dire, au mien, en moins même petits yeux

de furet, même petite moustache ratée, et une bouche bien

mince et rouge, comme congestionnée à force de vouloir

chier sa langue. [22]

 

As readers, we are trapped in a kind of Russian doll or hall of mirrors, you can go back and read Molloy’s account of the assault, and then return to Moran’s, which is what I did on multiple occasions, and again, I must confess, I still don’t know who the hell has hit who, and I have been reading this novel, on and off, for almost forty years! But then, is not this its fundamental beauty? It seems to me that Beckett, in his novel Molloy, manages to create the almost perfect novel as you can read it without end, and the contents that you find within, which are nothing less than a very scrupulous ontological reflection on human identity, leave one almost convinced that you have come very close, perhaps as close as you can possibly come, to exploring the fundamental problem with the issue of human nature. As it is an irresolvable one.

The more I reflect on the possibility that Molloy and Moran are in fact that same person, or at least allow for the possibility, the more the idea appeals to me and the more philosophically, politically and culturally, it makes more and more sense to me. I am immediately reminded of course of the hermaphroditic giants in Aristophanes tale of the origins of Love in Plato’s Symposium who, feeling so emboldened, decided to assault the heavens and take on the gods which I believe is a myth that obsessed Beckett, so much so that it forms the basis of his final and most complex attempt at the novel, Comment C’est/ How It Is, which will be the subject of my next article.  

 

 

 

  

 

Bibliography

Alighieri, Dante: Commedia, Volume 1, Inferno,  Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Milano, 1991.

Beckett, Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Editions de Minuit, Paris, 2002.

Cordingley, Anthong: Samuel Beckett’s How it Is, Philosophy in Translation, Edinburgh University Press, 2018.

 Heidegger, Martin: Heraclitus, The Inception of Occidental Thinking and Logic: Heraclitus’s Doctrine of the Logos, Translated by Julia Goesser Assainte and S.Montgomery Ewegen, Blommsbury, London, First English language publication, 2018.

Kenner, Hugh: A Critical Study of Samuel Beckett, University of California Press, 1992.

Nietzsche, Friedrich: The Pre-Platonic Philosophers, Translated from the German and Edited with an Introduction and Commentary, by Greg Whitlock, University of Illinois Press, First Paperback Edition, 2006.



[1] Beckett, Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Editions de Minuit, Paris, 2002, p.114.

[2] At the request of Julie Hegarty Lovett, I stepped into replace Jerry Dukes, who took sick, in the second How It Is conference in the Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, 2019.

https://www.proquest.com/openview/366b94602a98b3ddb7173b011b3e1d2b/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=45347

I had been lucky to attend the first conference in Paris the year previous, also.

https://garestlazareireland.com/how-it-is-symposium-paris

This was a more reworked version of the text which I had presented in UCD some years before.

[4] Beckett, Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Editions de Minuit, Paris, 2002, p. 125.

[5] Ibid. p. 239.

[6] Ibid - Molloy” Un événment littéraire une œuvre, pp. 243-274.

[7] Beckett, Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Editions de Minuit, Paris, pp.245-246.

[8] O’Neill, Peter: More Micks than Dicks, Famous Seamus, London, 2017. ( Out of print)

https://www.amazon.in/More-Micks-Than-Dicks-Beckettian/dp/0955685796

 

[9] Heraclitus first appears in the chapter Yellow in More Pricks than Kicks ( 1934) and he appears again in Comment C’est ( 1961) and How It Is ( 1964), so that is a period of thirty years between these two publications, which are but two works in which the pre-Socratic philosopher appears. 

[10] The German thinker died in 1900, while Beckett was born six years later. This is something I think that we must be aware of, and so which needs to be emphasised, Nietzsche’s thinking would still have been very new to Beckett’s generation and a lot of his ideas would have been seen, while Beckett was in Trinity say in the nineteen twenties, to be still very radical.

[11] “je me mis à genoux, non ça va pas, je me mis debout. » p. 246.

[12] Nietzsche, Friedrich: The Pre-Platonic Philosophers, Translated from the German and Edited with an Introduction and Commentary, by Greg Whitlock, University of Illinois Press, First Paperback Edition, 2006, pp.62-63.

[13] Belacqua is a character from out of Dante’s Purgatorio, we encounter him in Canto IV as Dante and Virgil are trudging up Mount Purgatory. Belacqua informs the intrepid duo that he has been consigned to this particular stretch of the Mountain for the sin of laziness. Beckett himself seems to have identified very strongly with this particular vice as another literary hero of Beckett’s was the fictional character Oblomov ( 1859) from the book of the same name by Ivan Goncharov, who, like Belacqua, and the young Beckett, it seems, suffered very much from indecision and sloth. Beckett has a wonderful quatrain which pretty much sums up his youthful life as a scholar. It is called Gnome.

Spend the years of learning squandering

Courage for the years of wandering

Through a world politely turning

From the loutishness of learning.

 

This poem originally appeared in The Dublin Magazine, 1934.

 

[14] Alighieri, Dante: Commedia, Volume 1, Inferno,  Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Milano, 1991, pp.-7-9.

In the middle of this life

I found myself in a dark wood,

for the straight way had been lost. ( This translation my own.)

[15] The Canadian literary critic Hugh Kenner wrote an important study on Beckett, Samuel Beckett, A Critical Study ( 1961) which places great importance on the historical and personal background of Beckett’s overall experience during the war on the writer’s entire literary output, and it is a refreshing change from all the usual discourse that you see published by academics who have gone down the Maurice Blanchot route.

[16] Beckett, Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Editions de Minuit, Paris, 2002, p. 202.

[17] Beckett Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Editions de Minuit, Paris, 2002, p. 142

[18] For a pretty comprehensive analysis of Beckett’s reading of philosophical texts, Anthony Cordingley’s, Samuel Beckett’s How it Is, Philosophy in Translation, Edinburgh University Press, 2018, is a pretty good introduction. Cordingley has access to Beckett’s philosophical notebooks which he makes extensive usage of. My only criticism of Cordingley’s book is that his whole premise is a little rigid, by confining himself merely to the content of the notebooks and applying them to a novel as revolutionary in form and content as Comment c’est – How It Is, reads a bit too cautious, in my opinion. But other than this criticism, which is an understandable fault on the part of Cordingley, Anglo-Saxon academics live and die on such radical empiricism, Helas!   

[19] Heidegger, Martin: Heraclitus, The Inception of Occidental Thinking and Logic: Heraclitus’s Doctrine of the Logos, Translated by Julia Goesser Assainte and S.Montgomery Ewegen, Blommsbury, London, First English language publication, 2018, p.67.

[20] The fact that the novel is simply called Molloy surely poses serious problems into the very existence of Moran in the context of the current debate? 

[21] Beckett, Samuel: Molloy, Collection “double”, Editions de Minuit, Paris, 2002, p. 202.

[22] Ibid, p., 205.