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  1. Vladimir then gets angry at Lucky for mistreating Pozzo. Pozzo calms down, but he realizes that he has lost his pipe and begins to get upset again. While Estragon laughs at Pozzo, Vladimir exits, apparently to go to the bathroom. He returns, in a bad mood, but soon calms down. Pozzo sits down again and begins to explain the twilight.

  2. Lucky is a character from Samuel Beckett 's Waiting for Godot. He is a slave to the character Pozzo. [1] Lucky is unique in a play where most of the characters talk incessantly: he only utters two sentences, one of which is more than seven hundred words long (the monologue). Lucky suffers at the hands of Pozzo willingly and without hesitation.

  3. Pozzo and Lucky enter. Pozzo drives lucky like an animal with a rope around his neck. He carries a whip to drive him along, while Lucky carries a folding stool, a bag, a picnic basket, and a coat. Pozzo whips Lucky as they pass across the stage and just as they are leaving the stage, he stops Lucky suddenly, causing him to drop all his things.

  4. Lucky is treated unforgivingly by Pozzo. Often depicted as an old man, Lucky is forced to carry Pozzo’s baggage, is not permitted to rest, and is connected to him by a rope (or leash). He obediently does the majority of what Pozzo wishes, and a large portion of Pozzo’s dialogue is dedicated to giving Lucky various instructions (“Stop!

  5. Any number of polarities could be used to apply to them. If Pozzo is the master (and father figure), then Lucky is the slave (or child). If Pozzo is the circus ringmaster, then Lucky is the trained or performing animal. If Pozzo is the sadist, Lucky is the masochist. Or Pozzo can be seen as the Ego and Lucky as the Id.

  6. Character Analysis. Plucky Lucky. Lucky is basically Pozzo’s slave. He is abused physically and verbally, made to work to the point of exhaustion, and denied any opportunity to act of his own accord. Sounds bad, right? Actually, Lucky’s position is painted as enviable in Waiting for Godot —just consider his name.

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  8. Waiting for Godot Lucky. Waiting for Godot. Lucky. Lucky is Pozzo’s slave, and he endures significant verbal and physical abuse throughout the play as well as dehumanizing treatment from the other three characters. The physicality of his character offers a key glimpse at the nature of his personality as he struggles under the weight of the ...

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