Rough for Theatre II is a play by Samuel Beckett.

Warning: Spoilers follow

In it, two businessmen like characters, A and B come to a man's apartment and begin to assess the life of a man C, standing at the window to a starry night, appearing to prepare to jump out the window and commit suicide.

They look over and discuss C's miserable life, trying to find some reason that C should not jump; one positive incident where C wins a watch is countered by the reason - one incident where C is sitting, closely contemplating some dog's excrement in the street, a man gives him a raffle ticket out of pity - it turns out to be the winning ticket.

A and B continue, in an almost comic fashion, with the desklamps flickering on and off, and with a didactic analysis ("shit! Where's the verb!") of the recounts they carry in their folders.

In the end, A and B come to the conclusion: "Let him jump". Before they leave, however, A goes to the window and shines a match to his face - C is already dead.