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In the Shadow of the Glen, in which a woman prefers a wandering life with a tramp over security with an old husband or even lover, contains echoes of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. Synge's next play, Riders to the Sea, evokes the threats of the sea and the hardship of a family on the Aran Islands. In The Playboy of the Western World the protagonist, Christy Mahon, arrives in a little town in County Mayo and is received as a hero when he boasts that he has murdered his father. Synge's other plays are The Well of the Saints (1905), The Tinker's Wedding (1908), and the unfinished Deirdre of the Sorrows.
Synge's breakthrough, achieved in part through some early translations from classic Gaelic prose and poetry, was to forge a distinctive linguistic style and tragicomic vision for the Irish stage. His ambivalent representation of rural life in western Ireland proved unpalatable to audiences expecting an unproblematically positive contribution to nationalism.
Red recalls the banner of Manas who united the Kyrgyz tribes. The emblem shows a bird's-eye view of a yurt, secured by a lattice of ropes. Effective date: 3 March 1992.
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