
Grove Koger
As I expand and update my 2002 book When the Going Was Good, I’m posting revised entries from the first edition. Today’s deals with a classic account of island life off the west coast of Ireland.
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John Millington Synge: The Aran Islands (Dublin: Maunsel, 1907)
Although he played the violin from an early age and had studied music at the Royal Irish Academy of Music and in Germany, Synge abandoned music in 1894 for literature. He attended the Sorbonne in Paris, where poet William Butler Yeats met him in 1896. Yeats suggested that he seek inspiration in the Aran Islands rather than the French capital, but an operation for Hodgkins Disease (an affliction that would eventually kill him) intervened before Synge made his first visit in May 1898.

The three Aran Islands (Inishmore, Inisheer, and Inishmaan) lie across the entrance to Galway Bay off the West coast of Ireland. On his first visit, Synge stayed in the barren, isolated islands six weeks. He returned each summer for the following three or four years, spending most of his time in Inishmaan and living for the most part in rented rooms in simple cottages. The experience revealed a society that was in his estimation “perhaps the most primitive that is left in Europe.”

Although published in 1907, only two years before Synge’s death, The Aran Islands was written soon after the turn of the century. Synge himself called it his “first serious piece of work.” Very much the observer, Synge describes the islands’ desolate landscape and harsh weather, records their archaic and often brutal way of life, and transcribes the stories (often about the fairy folk) he heard. He witnessed evictions and funerals, but the patterns of life and death he discovered are universal, however specific their immediate circumstances. Much of Synge’s experience of the islands went into the plays Riders to the Sea (1903) and The Playboy of the Western World (1907), and it was their success (and, in the case of the latter, notoriety) that made the publication of his earlier work possible. The drawings by Jack B. Yeats (the poet’s brother) amplify Synge’s spare prose.

Editions to look for: The Oxford edition published as Four Plays and the Aran Islands includes an introduction and other secondary material by Robin Skelton. The Vintage edition published as The Aran Islands, and Other Writings includes an introduction and notes by Robert Tracy. The Marlboro edition includes an introduction by Edward J. O’Brien. The Penguin edition includes an introduction by Tim Robinson. Thanks to the Internet Archive, you can also read a copy here.
See also by Synge: In Wicklow, West Kerry and Connemara (1910). And for further information about Synge, I suggest: Deborah Fleming, A Man Who Does Not Exist: The Irish Peasant in the Work of W.B. Yeats and J.M. Synge (U Michigan P, 1995); Donna Gerstenberger, John Millington Synge (rev. ed. Twayne, 1990); Alexander G. Gonzalez, Assessing the Achievement of J.M. Synge (Greenwood P, 1996); David H. Greene, J.M. Synge, 1871–1909 (New York UP, 1989); David M. Kiely, John Millington Synge: A Biography (Gill & Macmillan, 1994); Edward A. Kopper, Jr., ed., A J.M. Synge Literary Companion (Greenwood P, 1988); and W.J. McCormack, Fool of the Family: A Life of J.M. Synge (New York U P, 2000).

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