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The Life and Time of Jonathan Swift

When a writer develops a novel, he/she often incorporates events, people, and places from his/her own life into the story he/she creates. Gullivers Travels, written by Jonathan Swift, is a prime example of this theory. In every book, chapter, page, and even word, Swift can be seen. His moral, scientific, philosophical, and political views made for a story of awesome potential. A story that touched upon every aspect of human nature. Jonathan Swift was born in Dublin on November 30, 1667. He had a rather warped childhood being that he was brought up by his uncle Godwin and without a mother or father.

His father died before he was born and his mother just couldnt afford to take care of him. Though emotionally impoverished, he was still well provided for and attended only the best schools in Ireland. After graduating from Trinity College, Swift became secretary of the statesman Sir William Temple. He wished to enter politics but settled for the church, in which he was ordained in 1694. In 1702 he moved to England in hope of political appointment. There, in 1704, he published his first works, the Tale of a Tub, a satire on corruption in religion and learning.

In 1710 the government passed from Whig to Tory control. The Tories, recognising Swifts abilities, quickly made him the editor of their journal, the Examiner . Thus, he became an unofficial power in English politics as well as a leading writer. Swift wrote in support of the Peace of Utrecht, which ended the War of the Spanish Succession with France and Spain. This war is recounted in Book I as the war between Lilliput and Blefuscu. He managed to turn the stream of popularity against the Whigs. And in fact, dictated the political opinions of the English nation.

He delivered Ireland from plunder and oppression with such force s an author he could in fact persuade the people(Johnson 430). Because of this he became a largely respected man, but a largely hated man as well. Swifts political power ended with another change in government in 1714. He became the deanery of St. Patricks Cathedral in Dublin, a post that carried prestige but also limited him to Ireland,where he would have to remain the rest of his life. Ireland in the 18th Century was a colony of England, denied self government and held back by English landlords.

He devoted the rest of his life criticising British rule in yet more satiric pamphlets such as A Modest Proposal, and his ost famous satire Gullivers Travels. In this work, he used Gulliver, as a tool in which he could anonymously speak(Hunting 92). Each of the four voyages releases a fantasy or dream situation to reflect the thoughts of Swift through the use of satire. In Book I of Gullivers Travels, Gullivers ship is destroyed in a great storm, and he wakes up in a land of little people, less than six inches tall, who call themselves Lilliputians.

Gulliver is gradually accepted by the Lilliputians, and granted more and more freedoms over time. He eventually learns that the present mperors grandfather had issued an edict ordering all subjects to break their eggs at the small end only. Soon a civil war broke out between those who broke their eggs at the big end and those who broke their eggs at the small end. Many of the Big-Endians sought exile on a nearby island known as Blefuscu. When the Emperor demands that Gulliver seize the Blefuscu fleet he does so, but when the emperor demands he destroy their empire he refuses.

In no time at all, Gulliver goes from ahero to a criminal accused of treason. His punishment would be loss of sight but Gulliver manages to escape and take shelter n Blefuscu. There, he found a small boat and left for England. He was picked up by an English merchant ship and brought back to England. All of Part I of the travels is an allegorical account of British politics during the turbulent early 18th Century. England was a limited monarch, led by a king, queen, and parliament. The Lilliputians small size exemplifies their incredibly ridiculous quarrels, and their natural inferiority to something larger.

The war between the big-endians and small-endians most likely depicts the tensions between France and England over religious differences. In addition, the two Lillipution parties clearly represent the two main English political parties, the In Book II of Gullivers Travels , Gulliver is left on a strange island full of giants. He is discovered by a harvester and placed in the care of his nine year old daughter. Eventually he becomes jester for the queen and is granted a luxurious box in which to stay. One day, by the shore, the box is carried away by a great bird and dropped in the sea.

Once ageing, he gets picked up by English sailors and Now Gulliver is smaller and ridiculous one and reduced to doing sideshows. He complains of the English government. They love, fight, dispute, cheat, and betray, stated Gulliver. The Brobdingnagians, however, do not. In this book, Britain is inferior. This book represents Swifts views on the corruption and dishonesty found in the British system. How can a government be fare and effective when its corrupt(Ross 468)? In the third book, Gulliver is taken onto the flying island of the Laputans and some of its colonies nearby. It is occupied by men preoccupied with science and math.

Theyre so trapped in thought that they miss out on life. Gulliver isits the projectors at the Academy who study impractical ventures and have caused the destruction of many good lands. Next he visits Lagado where he meets many among the dead. And lastly, he visits Lugnagg, land of the immortals. He later learns that their beauty is only outer and they suffer all other pains of aging. The king gives Gulliver a letter to give to the Emperor of Japan. This letter will allow him passage onto a ship home to England. This book first shows Swifts view on reason. How to much reason can be unnatural and shadow the human inside of us.

It also shows how to much theory nd philosophy not only distorts reality but damages it as well. It develops Swifts In Part IV Gulliver floats to a strange island, the land of the Houyhnhnms. The Houyhnhnms are horses governed totally by reason. They have created a society that is perfectly ordered, perfectly peaceful, and spared the torments of passion. The only exception is the Yahoos; humans on the outside but savage on the inside. Gulliver, as neither a Houyhnhnms or Yahoo fits no where on this Gulliver tries to best become a Houyhnhnms. He learns to talk like them, walk like them, tries to even think and act like them.

However, he doesnt succeed and realises this isnt where he belongs. Back in England he goes mad. He can reconcile himself to other people, whom he considers Yahoos. Neither can he come to terms with the Yahoo part of himself. He can barely tolerate the presence of his own family and has as little to do with them as possible. He says his aim in Gullivers Travels is to correct the Yahoos. Having been exposed to the Houyhnhnms, he feels it to be his duty to do so. In this book, Swift attacks man in general, and makes us aware of the faults of the human mind(Desfontaines 427).

The Houthnhnms speak clearly, act justly and have simple laws. They do not argue because they all know what is right and they all know what is true. They do not suffer from uncertainties as does man but they are so reasonable that they lack emotion. Greed, politics, and lust play no part in their lives yet often seem to be the driving force in ours. However, some people believe that the Yahoos didnt necessarily represent humans due to the description given by Swift. He describes them as creatures with claws who climbed tree as if they were squirrels.

This suggests that they were eant to represent the opposite of the Houyhnhnms but not the human Swift offers no solutions to the difficulties he makes Gulliver undergo. He traces the problems to the nature of man. His view of man are sensible. He views man as an animal capable of reasoning, but he is not a fully rational animal. He often looks at man as a deprived creature. Gullivers Travel could be considered an attack on human nature or simply an assessment of human strengths and weaknesses (Drapier 420). Regardless, It represents his views on all topics ranging from religion to politics to human nature.

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