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'''''... but the clouds ...''''' is a television play by [[Samuel Beckett]]. Beckett wrote it between October–November 1976 "to replace a film of ''[[Play (play)|Play]]'' which the [[BBC]] had sent [him] for approval (and which he had rejected)"<ref>
==Title==
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Several months after the McWhinnie production in which he was himself heavily involved, Beckett had the opportunity to act as his own director in the [[German (language)|German]] version, '''''Nur noch Gewölk''''', for [[Süddeutscher Rundfunk]]. In this production he made one or two minor changes but the main one was to include the whole last [[stanza]] above rather than the four lines in the original.
"''The Tower'' is a work which discusses history and the past not only in terms of recollection but also as an entire complex of traces, remainders and legacies of which individual subjective memory is only one element."<ref name="multiref1">
"The painful, highly personal question raised by Yeats is: if the poet's physical powers fail, if his vision and hearing are impaired, can the memory of the sensory world serve as a basis for poetry? Is memory alone capable of stimulating the creative act? ... As he draws upon his memory, revisiting scenes both in his life and works, he comes to respond affirmatively to the pessimistic question first raised ... The poet's physical impairments, paradoxically, prove a blessing. Indeed, in the stanza from which Beckett derived his title, Yeats puts the real world in perspective, thereby reducing his own sense of loss."<ref>{{cite book |first=Sidney |last=Homan
But why this particular line from the poem? Is it to do with the nature of [[cloud]]s? "Clouds seem permanent but are ultimately impermanent; they cannot be touched, yet can be seen; they are nothing more than condensed water, yet remain a [[symbol]] of romance, of the imagination beyond practical measurement – they are, in a phrase, at once here and elsewhere."<ref name="multiref2">{{cite book |first=Sidney |last=Homan
==Structure==
===Characters===
The director, Sidney Homan, defines the four 'characters' in this work:<ref name="Homan68">{{cite book |first=Sidney |last=Homan
* M is the poet in reflective mode
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===Stages===
Unlike ''[[Quad (play)|Quad]]'', which utilises a single fixed camera throughout, there are a total of sixty camera shots in this piece, "the shape of an hour or a minute",<ref name="multiref3">
====Stage 1====
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====Stage 4====
('''Direction 53-60'''): In the final stage, the poet actually "finds success, almost as an ironic consequence of his despair. The woman appears and, this time, V is able to [recite] all four lines from Yeats's poem, rather than the truncated and hence frustrating single line of the television play's title."<ref
==Synopsis==
The play opens in darkness. It fades up to a shot from behind of M, a "man sitting on [an] invisible stool and bowed over [an] invisible table."<ref name="multiref4">{{cite book |first=Samuel |last=Beckett
We hear a voice and assume it belongs to the man we are looking at, at least it is his thoughts we hear. He is remembering the circumstances under which he has seen the woman in the past. While he remembers we see M1, his remembered/imagined self, go through the motions described, at least what little actually takes place in the circle of light. He changes his mind about what causes her to appear. At first he says, "When I thought of her..."<ref>{{cite book |first=Samuel |last=Beckett
The voice lists the three instances listed above where the woman has appeared to him in the past. When he reaches the third one the camera cuts to the woman's face, "reduced as far as possible to eyes and a mouth",<ref name="multiref4"/> which mouths silently along with the voice, "...clouds...but the clouds...of the sky..."<ref name="
Although from the opening scene it seems like he spends every night willing the woman to appear, this isn't the case. Sometimes he grows weary and occupies himself with other things that are "more ... rewarding, such as ... [[cube root]]s"<ref name="
We see M1 prepare for the road again and leave. The voice says, "Right," then the woman's face appears once more and the voice repeats the final four lines of Yeats's poem. This time, however, the woman does not mouth the words. Her face dissolves, we are left with the man sitting at his invisible table where we began and everything fades to black.
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==Interpretation==
In a number of other works Beckett has felt the need to split an individual into separate aspects of that character, e.g. ''[[Words and Music (play)|Words and Music]]'', where the writer, his words and his emotions are all represented by separate characters. "In ''... but the clouds ...'', however, Beckett is concerned not with fragments of the self, but the whole person. The [[protagonist]], M, sees himself whole, (as at the end of ''Film'') held in the light circle of the imagination ... The action of ''... but the clouds ...'' consists of M reliving past experience with such intensity that he can see himself performing his daily routine."<ref>{{cite book |first=Rosemary |last=Pountney
The man is a poet, "caught in the writer's trap, the expectation of [[Artistic inspiration|inspiration]]."<ref>{{cite book |first=Rosemary |last=Pountney
Krapp sat at a real table and heard a real voice, albeit himself as a younger man. The man in ''... but the clouds ...'' sits at an invisible table unable to write. Everything he encounters is outside a circle of dim, suffused light. This gives the play a dreamlike quality, the circle of light becomes a kind of 'no place' where this daily ritual takes place. The only voice is the one inside his head. Even the roads take on an abstract quality; they are neither to nor from anywhere unlike the travel options in ''[[Cascando]]'', for example.
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Not all of Krapp's actions take place at his table, we hear him pouring drinks and attempting to sing in the darkness surrounding his stage as a means of distracting himself from the task in hand; in ''Quad'', the players' only reality is within the lighted square as is the case with the women of ''[[Come and Go]]'' but in ''... but the clouds ...'' all the real action takes place in the darkness, the central circle of light is a place of transition only.
The fact that the woman may well have been real, rather than some [[Stereotype|stereotypical]] projection of M's ideal woman, is suggested by the line, "With those unseeing eyes I so begged ''when alive'' to look at me."<ref>{{cite book |first=Samuel |last=Beckett
"For Beckett and for Yeats, there is a difference between remembering and not remembering, but both writers remind us that not remembering does not necessarily equal forgetting. That which is not consciously 'remembered' by an individual can still return to impose itself is a variety of ways, one of which both Yeats and Beckett qualify as a kind of haunting."<ref name="multiref1"/> This makes one viewer's comment as to the nature of W all the more interesting when they call her "the character who appears but isn't really there – she only gives the appearance of an appearance."<ref name="multiref2"/>
The man is a poet but he is also – and unexpectedly – a [[mathematician]], a rational man. Numbers play a significant part in Beckett's works (particularly the number three as it was a favourite of [[Dante Alighieri|Dante's]]). "M's addiction to numbers – the four cases, the reference to cube roots, the two [[Statistics|statistical]] possibilities given for the fourth case – [can be] explained as a defensive posture. M must know that the woman's appearance is at [[Randomness|random]] and defies [[logic]]. His careful efforts to establish mathematically the exact and proper conditions for her appearance are merely an attempt to give order to an experience he knows, deep inside, is beyond rational [[measurement]] or [[prediction]]."<ref>{{cite book |first=Sidney |last=Homan
He would prefer that the woman appears when he thinks of her, that there should exist a clear correlation between conscious thought and realisation but his is not the case. He is forced to modify the theory he is testing acknowledging that the woman's face merely "appeared" and those appearances were always at night. By the end of the play "he has done all he can do, he is now at the mercy of [[Divine Providence|Providence]]. The woman will appear ''if'', pleased with his efforts, she decides to appear."<ref>{{cite book |first=Sidney |last=Homan
: "Like the characters imagined in the play ''The Words upon the Window Pane'', the 'he' we meet in ''... but the clouds ...'' sits [[trance]]-like at a [[séance]], calling out to a face and a voice to appear: 'Look at me' and then, echoing [[Hamlet]]'s appeal to a quite different ghost, 'Speak to me.' A scene from Yeats is all but impossible to dismiss:"<ref name="multiref3"/>
::: Dr Trench: I thought she was speaking.
::: Mrs Mallet: I saw her lips move.<ref>
"As [[Katharine Worth]] has pointed out, in Yeatsian terminology 'shades' [the final word of Yeats's poem] necessarily conjures up thoughts of [[spirit]]s or [[ghost]]s along with the onset of evening, and Beckett's play only reinforces this somewhat understated {{linktext|nuance}}."<ref name="multiref1"/> The prevalence of 'ghosts' in Beckett's later writings hardly needs commenting on.<ref>
[[John Calder]] in his review of the three plays shown on BBC2 had this to say about ''... but the clouds ...'':
: "The man would appear ... to be immersed in guilt towards a missed opportunity, a dead love, a regretted course of action, as in ''[[Eh Joe]]'', but with a flatter style. [[Irony]] is subdued, [[stoicism]] more matter of fact, [[self-pity]] almost entirely absent, illusion excluded. The man is concerned with concentration, a [[Merlin]] conjuring up a ghost in his memory."<ref>
Clearly the process in this play is open to interpretation. Is the process wholly internal, the man remembering someone real from his past or is he trying to conjure up some external manifestation of her, her ghost? And what is his motive for trying to evoke her? Is it simply to satisfy memory, to wallow in the moment awhile as Krapp does, or is she in some way his muse, an enabling force that makes the words come? Either way it is clear that he cannot control events directly, by the power of his [[Will (philosophy)|will]], things take place at best, as a byproduct almost of his actions, but more likely they are entirely out of his control and all he can do is wait on them.
==Music==
A version with music by [[Martin Pearlman]] was produced at the [[92nd Street Y]] in New York for the Beckett centennial in 2006.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/2006/03/29/ |title=92nd Street Y, Samuel Becket at 100, Three Plays |access-date=2010-03-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080416164759/http://blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/2006/03/29/ |archive-date=2008-04-16 |url-status=dead
▲A version with music by [[Martin Pearlman]] was produced at the [[92nd Street Y]] in New York for the Beckett centennial in 2006.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/2006/03/29/ |title=92nd Street Y, Samuel Becket at 100, Three Plays |access-date=2010-03-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080416164759/http://blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/2006/03/29/ |archive-date=2008-04-16 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
==References==
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