It is 1936 and harvest time in County Donegal. In a house just outside
the village of Ballybeg live the five Mundy sisters, barely making ends
meet, their ages ranging from twenty-six up to forty. The two male
members of the household are brother Jack, a missionary priest,
repatriated from Africa by his superiors after twenty-five years, and
the seven-year-old child of the youngest sister. In depicting two days
in the life of this menage, Brian Friel evokes not simply the interior
landscape of a group of human beings trapped in their domestic
situation, but the wider landscape, interior and exterior, Christian and
pagan, of which they are nonetheless a part.