Worstward Ho
"Worstward Ho" is a work of prose by Samuel Beckett. Its title is a parody of Charles Kingsley's Westward Ho!. Written in English in 1983, it is the penultimate novella by Beckett.
Together with Company and Ill Seen Ill Said, it was collected in the volume Nohow On in 1989. Beckett’s famous quote can be found in Worstward Ho – "Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better."[1]
Pianist John Tilbury set the piece to music. Tilbury referred to the "remarkable text" of Worstward Ho as "a deconstruction, no less, of the grammar and syntax of the English language with an extreme economy of words, many of which are monosyllabic."[2]
References
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- Dream of Fair to Middling Women
- Murphy
- Watt
- Mercier and Camier
- Molloy
- Malone Dies
- The Unnamable
- How It Is
- "Assumption"
- "Echo's Bones"
- "First Love"
- "From an Abandoned Work"
- "All Strange Away"
- "Imagination Dead Imagine"
- "Ping"
- "Lessness"
- "The Lost Ones"
- Fizzles
- "neither"
- "Stirrings Still"
- Company
- Ill Seen Ill Said
- "Worstward Ho"
- "Three Dialogues"
- Disjecta
- Proust
- "The Capital of the Ruins"
- Suzanne Dechevaux-Dumesnil (wife)
- Frances Beckett (aunt)
- James Beckett (uncle)
- Journal of Beckett Studies
- LÉ Samuel Beckett (P61)
- Samuel Beckett Bridge
- Notfilm (2015 documentary)
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