Riders to the Sea by J M Synge: Suggestive Broad Questions & Answers# 4th Semester WBCHSE
Bartley is determined to go to Connemara to sell horses at the Galway Fair to secure money for his impoverished family despite the ominous signs, his family's fears and his mother’s pleas and premonitions. He dies tragically as the Grey Pony knocks him into the sea, and
he is washed out where there is a great surf on the white rocks.
Bartley's character represents the youthful energy and resilience of the islanders, while his death serves as their tragic destiny, the harsh reality of Aran Islands, where the sea demands sacrifices of the loved ones relentlessly and ruthlessly one after another. Hence his character draws the play's tragic climax, embodying the themes of duty, inevitability, and the overwhelming power of the Sea.
5. Consider Riders to the Sea as a successful one-act play.
Riders to the Sea as a one-act play: J. M. Synge's unique creation "Riders to the Sea" is set on a solitary Irish cottage in Aran Islands within a short timeframe centered on Maurya's stoic acceptance of her last son, Bartley's death by the overwhelming Sea which takes away all the male members of her family one after another relentlessly. Only a few characters with concise dialogue, rich in Irish dialect draw grief and despair, creating a powerful, unified tragic effect with the help of powerful symbols and images like the Sea, the Horses, the Spinning Wheel, the Cloth, the Holy Water, the Coffin, the Rope, the Net, the Black Knot, Michael's Ghost, etc.
In essence the playwright has masterfully used the one-act structure to distill a timeless story of life, death and acceptance into a poignant, unforgettable dramatic experience vividly and clearly in an artistic way in the world of literature.

