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Breath : Breath (play)Breath is a short stage work by Samuel Beckett (see Respiration for the biological function).It was written for inclusion in Kenneth Tynan[?]'s revue[?] Oh! Calcutta!, which was first staged at the Eden Theatre in New York City on June 16, 1969. It was first performed in Britain at the Close Theatre Club in Glasgow in October 1969, and first published in the periodical Gambit in 1970. Even for Beckett, whose later plays are often extremely short, Breath is an unusually terse work. Its length can be estimated from Beckett's detailed instructions in the script to be about 35 seconds. It consists of a recording of a brief cry, followed by an amplified recording of somebody slowly inhaling and exhaling accompanied by an increase and decrease in the intensity of the light. There is then a second cry, and the piece ends. No people are seen on stage, but Beckett states that it should be "littered with rubbish." Beckett sent the text of the play on a postcard to Tynan. At the first production, Tynan made the work fit in with the somewhat risque nature of his revue by scattering naked bodies amongst the rubbish, suggesting that the work was about sexual intercourse. Modern critics, however, have tended to see it as being about a more typical Beckett subject: the relative shortness and futility of life itself. Some critics have seen it as a summation of Pozzo's words in Waiting for Godot: "They give birth astride a grave, the light gleams an instant and then it is night once more." Others have been less charitable, thinking of it as a bad joke. A filmed version of Breath was directed by the artist Damien Hirst[?] as part of the Beckett on Film[?] project. This room.html">room.html">room is beautifully
having a separate door, is a small room with a stone reservoir, which
passing their hand with a cup through an iron.html">iron grated opening, which
mouth of the well is surrounded by a wall.html">wall five feet in height and about
water in leathern buckets, an iron railing being so placed as to
marble basins in this room, for the purpose of ablution.
On the north-east (south-east) side of Zem Zem stand two small
covered by domes painted in the same manner as the Mosque, and in them
used in the very Mosque.[FN#43] These two ugly buildings are injurious
structure being very disadvantageously contrasted with the light and
better taste than the Arabs, express their regret that the Kobbateyn
Khoshgeldy, governor of Djidda A.H. 947; one is called Kobbet el/el.html">el Abbas,
formed by Abbas, the uncle of Mohammed.
[p.311] A few paces west.html">west (north-west) of Zem Zem, and directly opposite
is moved up to the wall of the Kaabah on days when that building is
with some carved ornaments, moves on low wheels, and is sufficiently
sent hither from Cairo in A.H. 818 by Moyaed Abou el Naser, King of
insulated and circular arch, about fifteen feet wide, and eighteen. All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
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