In 1897, J. M. Synge was encouraged by his friend and colleague William Butler Yeats to visit the Aran Islands. He went on to spend the summers from 1898 to 1903 there. While on the Aran island of Inishmaan, Synge heard the story of a man from Inishmaan whose body washed up on the shore of an island of County Donegal, which inspired Riders to the Sea. Riders to the Sea is written in the Hiberno-English dialect of the Aran Islands. Synge's use of the native Irish language is part of the Irish Literary Revival, a period when Irish literature looked to encourage pride and nationalism in Ireland. Several scenes in the play are taken from stories Synge collected during his time in the Aran Islands and recorded in his book . These include the identifying of the drowned man by his clothing and the account of a man's ghost being seen riding a horse.
Important characters
Maurya: Grief-stricken widow and mother of eight children Cathleen, Nora, Bartley, Shawn, Sheamus, Stephen, Patch, and Michael.
Cathleen: Maurya's elder daughter, tries to keep her mother from dying from grief by identifying her deceased brother Michael's clothing.
Nora: Maurya's younger daughter, helps her sister with their mother.
Bartley: Maurya's youngest and only living son, has died by the end of the play.
Maurya's sons Shawn, Sheamus, Stephen, Patch, and Michael, as well as Maurya's husband are all deceased when the play begins.
There is also a priest character who is never seen but is quoted by Cathleen and Nora in the beginning of the play.
Plot synopsis
Maurya has lost her husband, and five of her sons to the sea. As the play begins Nora and Cathleen receive word from the priest that a body, which may be their brother Michael, has washed up on shore in Donegal, on the Irish mainland north of their home island of Inishmaan. Bartley is planning to sail to Connemara to sell a horse, and ignores Maurya's pleas to stay. He leaves gracefully. Maurya predicts that by nightfall she will have no living sons, and her daughters chide her for sending Bartley off with an ill word. Maurya goes after Bartley to bless his voyage, and Nora and Cathleen receive clothing from the drowned corpse that confirms it was Michael. Maurya returns home claiming to have seen the ghost of Michael riding behind Bartley and begins lamenting the loss of the men in her family to the sea, after which some villagers bring in the corpse of Bartley. He has fallen off his horse into the sea and drowned. This speech of Maurya's is famous in Irish drama:
Themes
Paganism
The pervading theme of this work is the subtle paganism Synge observed in the people of rural Ireland. Following his dismissal of Christianity, Synge found that the predominantly Roman Catholic Ireland still retained many of the folktales and superstitions born out of the old Celtic paganism. This play is an examination of that idea as he has a set of deeply religious characters find themselves at odds with an unbeatable force of nature. While the family is clearly Catholic, they still find themselves wary of the supernatural characteristics of natural elements, an idea very present in Celtic paganism.
Tradition vs. Modernity
Another main theme of the play is the tension between the traditional and modern worlds in Ireland at the time. While Maurya, representative of the older Irish generation, is immovably tied to the traditional world and inward-looking, Nora, representative of the younger generation is wiling to change with the outside world and therefore outward-looking. Cathleen, the eldest daughter struggles to bridge these two worlds and hold both in balance.
Fatalism
The characters of the play are at all times in contact with and accepting of the reality of death, the sea and drowning especially being a constant threat. They are caught between the dual realities of the sea as a source of livelihood and a fatal threat. The objects and culture of death in the form of coffins, keening, and mourning are prevalent in the play and are closely based on Synge's observations of the culture of the Aran Islands.
Other versions
Cinema
At least two motion picture versions of the play have been made:
One of the earliest examples of Irish film in 1935 a 40-minute black-and-white movie directed by Brian Desmond Hurst with screenplay adaptation by Patrick Kirwan with Sara Allgood and, notably, Synge's bereaved fiancée Marie O'Neill. Hurst had been mentored in Hollywood by John Ford, and Ruth Barton describes scenes in the film as "remarkably Fordian."
A 1987 47-minute color movie directed and adapted by Ronan O'Leary with Geraldine Page.
Opera
The composer Ralph Vaughan Williams made an almost verbatim setting of the play as an opera, using the same title. Bruce Montgomery wrote a light opera, Spindrift, that was based on Riders to the Sea. German composer Eduard Pütz also set the play as an opera, using the same title. American composer Marga Richter also set the play as a one-act opera, using the same title. French composer Henri RabaudL’appel de la mer, a one-act opera,, libretto by Rabaud based on Riders to the Sea, debut in Paris, Salle Favart, April 10, 1924
Dance
's piece is titled Threnody.
Stage
Señora Carrar's Rifles is a one-act play adaptation. DruidSynge a stage reenactment of all Synge's plays.
French version
The play has been translated in French by Georgette Sable and it has been published by Anthropomare Other translations include: À cheval vers la mer translated by Maurice Bourgeois, Cavaliers à la mer, translated by Fouad El-Etr, and Cavaliers vers la mer, translated by Françoise Morvan.