Appendix III:  Nonfiction
The  Capital  oj the  Ruins 
ON WHAT A YEAR AGO  was  a grass slope, lying in the angle that the 
Vire and Bayeux roads make  as  they unite at the entrance of the 
town,  opposite  what  remains  of the  second  most  important 
stud-farm in France, a general hospital now stands. It is  the Hos-
pital  of the  Irish  Red  Cross  in  Saint-U>,  or,  as  the  Laudiniens 
themselves say, the Irish Hospital. The buildings consist of some 
25  prefabricated  wooden  huts.  They  are  superior,  generally 
speaking, to those so scantily available for the wealthier, the bet-
ter-connected, the astuter or the more flagrantly deserving of the 
bombed-out.  Their finish,  as  well  without as  within,  is  the  best 
that priority can command. They are  lined with glass-wool  and 
panelled in isorel, a strange substance of which only very limited 
supplies  are  available.  There  is  real  glass  in  the  windows.  The 
consequent atmosphere is that of brightness and airiness so com-
forting to sick people,  and to weary staffs. The floors,  where the 
exigencies  of hygiene  are  greatest,  are  covered  with  linoleum. 
There was  not enough linoleum in France to do more than this. 
The walls and ceiling of the operating theatre are sheeted in alu-
minium of aeronautic origin,  a decorative and practical solution 
of an  old  problem  and  a  pleasant  variation  on  the  sword  and 
ploughshare metamorphosis. A system of covered ways  connects 
275 
SAMUEL  BECKE1T:  THE  COMPLETE  SHORT  PROSE,  1929-19 89 
the  kitchen  with  refectories  and  wards.  The  supply  of electric 
current,  for  purposes both of heat and of power, leaves  nothing 
to  be  desired.  The  hospital  is  centrally  heated  throughout,  by 
means  of coke.  The  medical,  scientific,  nursing  and  secretarial 
staffs  are  Irish,  the  instruments  and  furniture  (including  of 
course  beds  and  bedding),  the  drugs  and  food,  are  supplied by 
the Society.  I  think I  am right in  saying  that the  number of in-
patients (mixed) is  in the neighbourhood of 90.  As  for  the oth-
ers,  it is  a regular thing,  according to recent reports, for as  many 
as 200 to be seen in the out-patients department in a day. Among 
such  ambulant  cases  a  large  number  are  suffering  from  scabies 
and other diseases  of the skin,  the  result no doubt of malnutri-
tion or an ill-advised diet.  Accident cases  are  frequent.  Masonry 
falls  when least expected,  children play with detonators and de-
mining  continues. The laboratory,  magnificently equipped,  bids 
well to become the official laboratory for the department, if not 
of an  even  wider area.  Considerable work has  already been done 
in the analysis  of local waters. 
These  few  facts,  chosen  not  quite  at  random,  are  no 
doubt  familiar  already  to  those  at  all  interested  in  the  subject, 
and  perhaps  even  to  those  listening  to  the  present  circumlocu-
tion.  They  may  not  appear  the  most  immediately  instructive. 
That the  operating-theatre should be  sheeted with  an expensive 
metal,  or  the  floor  of the  labour-room  covered  with  linoleum, 
can hardly be expected to interest those accustomed to such con-
ditions  as  the  sine  qua  non  of reputable  obstetrical  and  surgical 
statistics.  These  are  the  sensible  people  who  would  rather have 
news  of the  Norman's  semi-circular  canals  or resistance  to sul-
phur than of his  attitude to the  Irish bringing gifts,  who  would 
prefer  the  history  of our  difficulties  with  an  unfamiliar  phar-
macopia and system of mensuration to the story of our dealings 
with the rare and famous ways  of spirit that are the French ways. 
And yet the whole  enterprise  turned from  the beginning on the 
The  Capital oj the  Ruins 
establishing  of a  relation  in  the  light  of which  the  therapeutic 
relation  faded  to  the  merest  of pretexts.  What  was  important 
was  not our having penicillin when they had none, nor the unre-
garding  munificence  of the  French  Ministry  of Reconstruction 
(as  it was  then  called),  but the  occasional  glimpse  obtained,  by 
us in them and, who knows, by them in us (for they are an imagi-
native people), of that smile at the human conditions as  little to 
be  extinguished  by bombs  as  to  be  broadened  by  the  elixirs  of 
Burroughes  and  Welcome,-the  smile  deriding,  among  other 
things,  the having and the not having,  the giving  and the taking, 
sickness and health. 
It would  not be  seemly,  in  a  retiring  and  indeed  retired 
storekeeper,  to  describe  the  obstacles  encountered  in  this  con-
nexion,  and the forms,  often grotesque,  devised for them by the 
combined  energies  of the  home  and  visiting  temperaments.  It 
must be supposed that they were not insurmountable, since they 
have long ceased to be of much account. When I reflect now on 
the recurrent problems  of what,  with all  proper modesty, might 
be  called the heroic period,  on one  in particular so  arduous  and 
elusive that it literally ceased to be formulable,  I suspect that our 
pains were  those inherent in the simple and necessary and yet so 
unattainable proposition that their way of being we,  was  not our 
way and that our way  of being they, was  not their way.  It is  only 
fair to say that many of us  had never been abroad before. 
Saint-La was  bombed out of existence in one night. Ger-
man prisoners of war,  and casual labourers  attracted by the rela-
tive  food-plenty,  but soon  discouraged  by  housing  conditions, 
continue,  two years  after the liberation, to clear away the debris, 
literally  by  hand.  Their spirit  has  yet  to  learn  the  blessings  of 
Gallup  and  their  flesh  the  benefits  of the  bulldozer.  One  may 
thus  be  excused if one questions  the opinion generally received, 
that  ten  years  will  be  sufficient  for  the  total  reconstruction  of 
Saint-La.  But  no  matter  what  period  of time  must  still  be  en-
277 
SAMUEL  BECKETI:  THE  COMPLETE  SHORT PROSE,  1929-1989 
dured, before the town begins to resemble the pleasant and pros-
perous administrative and agricultural centre that it was,  the hos-
pital of wooden huts in its gardens between the Vire and Bayeux 
roads will continue to discharge its function, and its cures. "Pro-
visional"  is  not the  term  it was,  in  this  universe  become  provi-
sional.  It will  continue  to  discharge  its  function  long  after  the 
Irish are  gone and their names  forgotten.  But I think that to the 
end of its  hospital days  it will  be  called  the  Irish Hospital,  and 
after  that  the  huts,  when  they  have  been  turned into  dwellings, 
the Irish huts.  I mention this possibility,  in the hope that it will 
give general satisfaction. And having done so I may perhaps ven-
ture to mention another, more remote but perhaps of greater im-
port in certain quarters, I mean the possibility that some of those 
who  were  in Saint-Lo will  come  home realising  that they got at 
least as  good as  they gave,  that they got indeed what they could 
hardly give,  a vision and sense of a time-honoured conception of 
humanity in ruins,  and perhaps  even  an  inkling  of the  terms  in 
which our condition is to be thought again. These will have been 
in France. 
1 
Notes on the Texts 
Despite  a  pattern  of errors  running  through  the  editions  of Beckett's 
prose published by John Calder, some of the  Calder texts  contain Beck-
ett's latest revisions.  Beckett revised  his  stories  of 1946,  for  instance,  for 
Calder's separate edition of First Love (1973)  and the first collection of the 
four  stories,  Four  Novellas  (1977).  These  texts  were  subsequently  re-
printed,  with  minor  revisions  to  later  stories  as  well,  in  Collected  Shorter 
Prose,  1945-1980  (1984).  With the  notable  exceptions  discussed  below, 
I 
TI.  Lo  n___  "All SA" "Th  I  "d"  'th  " 
name y  .we  st  vntS,  trange  way,  e  mage,  an  nel  er, 
the  Collected  Shorter  Prose,  1945-1980  texts  have  been  adopted  (and  cor-
rected) for this  current volume. 
For Beckett's  first  short story,  "Assumption,"  the  text  reprinted 
here  is  that  corrected  and  collected  in  Transition  Workshop  (1949,  vide 
below).  Two separately  published  stories  from  Dream  oj Fair  to  Middling 
Women  have been included in this collection because they were published 
as  separate  stories,  "Sedendo  et Quiescendo"  and "Text,"  and  the  texts 
established by Dr. Eoin O'Brien based on his  editing of Dream  oj Fair  to 
Middling  Women  (Dublin: The Black Cat Press,  1992;  and New York:  Ar-
cade Press, 1993)  have  been adopted here. 
As  the  text of Samuel Beckett's  first  published short story,  "As-
sumption," suggests, editors have not always been kind to or careful with 
Samuel Beckett's work. It seems astonishing that for so  important a pub-
lication, his first story in a journal publishing James Joyce's  Work  in  Prog-
ress,  (transition   ~  7   [June 1929]: 268-71) "Assumption" should have been 
so  poorly  edited  and  proofread.  If we  except  the  obsolete  spelling  of 
"extasy"  as  indeed Beckett's (although it was  revised  in the reprint cited 
below), no fewer than five  glaring typographical errors mar Beckett's first 
published piece of short fiction. Those errors were corrected only twenty 
years  later  in  the  reprint  for  transition  workshop,  edited  by  Eugene  Jolas 
(New  York:  The  Vanguard  Press,  Inc.,  1949),  41-44;  that  text  is  re-
printed here. 
The original text for "Sedendo et Quiescendo" is  even more cor-
rupt than that for the original printing of "Assumption," except that the 
story has not heretofore been reprinted and so errors in the first printing 
have not been corrected. The number of errors in these first two transition 
279