Into Books Review: Silent Riders of the Sea by John Gerard Fagan

Book: Silent Riders of the Sea
Author: John Gerard Fagan
Publisher: Cyberbirdy Publishing (2024)

          Consider if this is a man
          Who works in the mud
          Who does not know peace
          Who fights for a scrap of bread
          Who dies because of a yes or a no.
                      Primo Levi

This long narrative poem – the story of Jack, a man in the depths of despair heading to the Arctic on a filthy trawler in 1930 – sets the heart thinking and the brain racing. In Fagan’s writing, every verse tells a story, every line is filled with meaning, every word demands attention. This may be one man’s history, but it is also a nation’s story, retold through Jack’s father’s life in the land of the fathers:

          but the world changed
         moved on
         the great war
         not enough work for the men that came after

Fagan’s free verse and metre make rhythmic designs on the page as the story unfolds in short stanzas, interiority mixing with the external world, the immediate past as present as the here and now.  This is particularly poignant in birth:

         having a wean
         it changes you
         the man he was vanished the day that boy was born

time brings the same visceral elements:

         everything eases with time
         that’s what he got told when his father died
         but some things can’t
         some hurts are too deep

Fagan’s powerful expressions of loneliness, seen throughout his memoir, Fish Town (Guts Publishing, 2021), are replicated in the last two lines of where the sun beats:

         a nervous energy sank into the bones of his chest
         and a fresh loneliness hatched once more

On board this grotesque ship with its gruesome gaffer and hopeless crew, the external world reaches into Jack’s mind, reading like a gothic horror with all the tropes of the monstrous sea. Jack is suffering physically and mentally after leaving sorrow behind in his mining town in the central belt. Fagan tells his story through memories of fresh fields and Campsie glens turned industrial but filled too with happy childhood memories which he wants his own child to experience. This is why he doesn’t emigrate after the Depression following the Great War and why he gives his life to the pits putting his family through extreme poverty in the process.

Guilt and grief at the death of his son bring Jack to the sea, and a promise of starting afresh, but he is not prepared for the waves of anguish which slap him on board, or the material sufferings from the dreich hell he finds himself in. Our protagonist is caught in the midst of an existential crisis, surrounded by weak and hungry men, bullied by a gaffer who reads like a character from a Dickens novel set in a Stevenson sea tale, who will never relent until he has a fulsome catch: 

         the men swayed like broken waves on an unforgiving shore
         one hour of overtime turned into two
         three
         four
         enough complaining
         I don’t want to hear another fucking word
                      overtime

But it is the poet’s craft that is the most alluring aspect of this book for me. The patterns formed and use of white space tell the story as much as alliteration, assonance and slant rhyme. Fagan’s verses match the dark, blurry images that he has created to complement the imagery of his words. Open punctuation maintains the flow and timbre and Scots words and abbreviations – ‘n’ every time for ‘and’ for example – add authenticity to the narrative voice. The richness of text is equalled by Fagan’s hollow pictures with liminal vibes, generating fear and tension in the reader who can feel the freeze and hear the wind that swallows the psyche of men who are losing all hope. This is not an Arctic story in the spirit of adventure; it is one man’s desperate journey to rescue the remnants of his relationship with Erin, his wife, the woman he loves:

         never as much as looked at another woman
         never wanted to
                    erin

In this quest Jack also attempts to drag his own soul up from the depths while living with the dregs of Scottish society:

         Jack slipped away to his bunk
         and sank into a dreamless sleep
                     dregs

thirteen days encapsulates the on-board horror if you weren’t convinced by the vomit, rats and stench from earlier verses:

         ears were one of the worst things to have on an Arctic ship
         swollen skin peeling
         needles in n out
         constant pain

This poem creates a sense of Conradian darkness mingled with Coleridgean mystery, but this is no myth, and the reality of suicide and sickness is all too obvious as the pages are turned. In the midst of this seeming perdition, Jack – a good man in many respects – reflects on the escapism of reading in his life on shore, when Russian novels and mariners’ tales helped him cope with the dreadful reality of life and accidents in the pits:

         Jack had never left Scotland
         but he had been all over the world through stories
                    novel

There is no escape from the icy environment that surrounds him though, as comrades fall ill, and the gaffer shows as little remorse for dealing with a sick human being as he did for a captured mammal.  With the seal:

         he smashed it over the head
         again
         and again
         and again
         he spat n wiped sweat dripping from his grey eyebrows
         booted the carcass back into the water
                   wildlife

For the man:

         it took several blows to return the silence
         the earless creature lay wriggling on the deck
         before being helped to the bunks
         Jack never saw him again.
                   memories of violence

Every man has a history though and there are hints at the gaffer’s own glimpses into the netherworld, but this does not change his furious push for the final catch when for an instant the crew dared to believe they were headed home. The reality hits Jack one night as he lies sleepless in his stinking bed, more bunk space available than before:

         he turned n faced the ceiling
         things were starting to make sense
         the gaffer never intended to pay them all did he
         maybe not any of them
                   lies of the ship

Though permanently in darkness, our hearts are lifted by snatches of loving memories, none more so than the happiest day of his life – a day off from the pit. But anger bubbles and whispers of mutiny against the haar arise:

         he was the haar
         and nothing n nobody could reason with him

Fagan builds the tension further through shifting weather and mounting rage:

         the gaffer was without doubt a sadistic bastard
         nothing on that ship was clearer
                     fury

The metaphor of the sea as life is ever present in Silent Riders as fish eyes are sucked out and bones thrown back, but awe strikes as a killer whales passes, and tenderness softens the bleakness when Jack nurses a sick young seabird. His sorrow at the loss of his son is ever present but his reason to stay alive in the ghastly ship remains constant and his determination to do so never wavers.

This story will haunt you, as classic stories often do but in its depth of horror I am reminded more of Primo Levi’s relentless struggle to survive in Birkenhau than of traditional sea adventures; the ship becomes a battleground, a site for the survival of the fittest and the question of who might triumph is almost immaterial as the essence of the story seems to be the suffering of the oppressed for the benefit of the richest and most powerful in any society, in any period of time. Will Jack face Hades as the deep green mist that suddenly appears on the sea’s surface suggests he might, or will moral justice prevail?

It is this question that keeps you reading through the smog; Jack’s ethical hope that keeps the pages alive.  The awfulness continues to be intercepted with loving thoughts of Erin and Jack’s promise to come back to her as the man he once was. But when tempers snap different fears arise and we begin to wonder if Jack and his fellow sufferers will make it back home. Sea and storms become the greatest enemies and memories of birthdays and home Jack’s only peace as the crew dwindles, frail with fever and starvation, and morality is set adrift. His fate becomes truly terrifying and like him, you begin to wonder if the underworld is his only destination.

I loved Fish Town, and this poetic tale set in different waters, doesn’t disappoint.

Silent Riders of the Sea can be purchased HERE.

L M Mulholland
@LorettaMulholl1