In the Shadow of the Glen (1903), a play by J. M. Synge. Nora Burke is married to an old farmer in Co. Wicklow who shams death to catch her making marriage plans with a young man. A Tramp offers her his company on the roads and she leaves with him.
| Irish Literature Companion: In the Shadow of the Glen |
In the Shadow of the Glen (1903), a play by J. M. Synge. Nora Burke is married to an old farmer in Co. Wicklow who shams death to catch her making marriage plans with a young man. A Tramp offers her his company on the roads and she leaves with him.
| Wikipedia: In the Shadow of the Glen |
In the Shadow of the Glen is a one-act play written by Irish playwright J. M. Synge, first performed in Molesworth Hall, Dublin on October 8, 1903. It was the first play by Synge to be performed on stage. It is set in an isolated cottage in County Wicklow during the early 1900s.
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A tramp seeking shelter in the isolated Burke farmhouse finds Nora tending to the corpse of Dan. Nora goes out to find Michael, and Dan reveals to the tramp that his death is a mere ruse. He plays dead again when Nora and Michael return, but leaps up in protest when Michael proposes to Nora. Dan kicks Nora out to wander the roads, and she leaves with the tramp, who promises her a life of freedom.
"Maybe cold would be no sign of death with the like of him, for he was always cold, every day since I knew him" - Nora
"for what good is a bit of a farm with cows on it, and sheep on the back hills, when you do be sitting looking out from a door the like of that door, and seeing nothing but the mists rolling down the bog, and the mists again, and they rolling up the bog, and hearing nothing but the wind crying out in the bits of broken trees were left from the great storm, and the streams roaring with the rain."-Nora
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