19 pages 38 minutes read

Liam O'Flaherty, Maxine Paetro, James Patterson

The Sniper

Fiction | Short Story | Adult | Published in 1923

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Summary: “The Sniper”

“The Sniper” is a short story by Liam O’Flaherty. It was first published in the British socialist newspaper, The New Leader in January 1923. The story takes place within the span of a few hours during an afternoon in June 1922 (the beginning of the Irish Civil War). The Irish Civil War was a one-year struggle that began in June 1922 and concluded in May 1923.

“The Sniper” portrays the experience of a Republican (rebel) sniper first on the rooftop of the O’Connell Bridge and later in the environs of Dublin’s high courts building known as the Four Courts. The story is told from the limited third-person perspective of the Republican soldier, henceforth referred to as the protagonist. The antagonist is also a sniper, an opposing Free Stater. Republicans were against the Anglo-Irish Treaty, believing that it sold out the Irish Republic. Free Staters supported the Anglo-Irish Treaty and favored an Irish Free State within the parameters of British rule.

The story takes place in twilight during June. The protagonist is on a rooftop. He has a “thin […] ascetic” face befitting a student, while his eyes betray his fanaticism (Paragraph 1). He hears guns blazing. He devours a sandwich and quaffs whiskey from a flask, as he hasn’t eaten all day. Though he knows the danger, he cannot resist the temptation for a cigarette. Just after lighting the match, he hears a bullet hit a part of the wall nearby, which forces him to put out his cigarette after just two puffs. His impulse is to look over the balcony. A bullet from the Free Stater sniper on the roof opposite scarcely misses him.

A car stops and idles about 50 yards away from the protagonist. He sees an old woman approach an armored enemy car, which the sniper knows his bullet will not penetrate. The light from his cigarette reveals him. When the woman points up to the rooftop in his direction, he realizes that she is betraying his whereabouts to the man in the vehicle. The man reveals himself through the car’s turret, an opening on the top through which machine guns can be positioned. The sniper shoots and kills him. The startled woman darts back to the side street. The sniper shoots her in the course of her retreat, causing her to fall into the gutter. The enemy vehicle speeds away, the dead man’s head hanging “lifeless over the turret” (Paragraph 13). Suddenly, the sniper hears a shot from the opposite rooftop and drops his rifle. Realizing that he cannot lift his arm, he shouts, “I’m hit.”

The protagonist opens his shirt using his pocketknife. He sees that the bullet entered his arm but did not bleed through. He must use his functional hand to break the neck of an iodine bottle which he carries with him. He experiences pain when applying the iodine, but proceeds to dress his wound, tying the bandage with his teeth.

The protagonist knows that he was hit by an enemy sniper on the opposite rooftop. As a consequence, he knows that he must get off the roof by morning or fall victim to this enemy. Realizing that he is unable to fire his rifle with only one hand, he caps the muzzle and shoots it over the parapet. He lets his arm and rifle fall over the parapet in order to give the illusion that he has been hit.

The enemy sniper falls for the ruse and stands up over the parapet when he sees the rifle fall. The protagonist shoots him with a revolver. The enemy falls over the parapet and his body rotates in the air as it falls to the earth. The protagonist is suddenly overcome by remorse as he sees the falling body. He resents the war and drains the remaining whiskey from his flask. Emboldened by the effects of the whiskey and not hearing much noise, he leaves the roof through the skylight to report to his commander. He feels inexplicably compelled to see the face of the enemy sniper whom he has just killed. When he goes into the street, he hears a storm of machine guns, but escapes unharmed. To avoid being shot, the sniper feigns death and throws his body next to that of the dead enemy sniper. When he rolls the corpse over, he realizes he has killed his own brother.

Liam O’Flaherty is famous for his short stories and 13 novels, a handful of which were written in Irish. His most successful novel, The Informer (1925), is about a Republican soldier during the Irish Civil War and was made into an Oscar-winning film in 1935. O’Flaherty was born in Dublin. After early training to join the priesthood, he fought as a soldier in World War I but was discharged after suffering a bad wound from a bomb blast in Belgium. Thereafter, he undertook various vocations such as bank clerk and factory worker. He was a lifelong proponent of Irish independence and member of the Irish Republican Army. “The Sniper,” like O’Flaherty’s other works, portrays the intimate point of view of a Republican soldier. O’Flaherty himself fought on the Republican side of a weeks-long series of street skirmishes famously known as the Battle of Dublin, which serves as this story’s setting. He left Ireland after the outnumbered Republicans lost. The battle saw hundreds of deaths on both sides, including civilian casualties.

O’Flaherty was a committed socialist and is today considered a leading figure of the Irish Renaissance (also called the Gaelic Revival). The Irish Renaissance got its name from the flourishing of Irish literature (including in the Irish language) during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Other notable figures in this movement include writer Thomas Moore, poet James Clarence Mangan, and poet and playwright Oscar Wilde.

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