Strange Lands

1143 Words3 Pages

The world is a strange place, full of strange people, strange customs, and strange ideas. Jonathan Swift understood that and chose to write down just how strange and absurd the world was, satirizing the customs of civilization and humanity by crafting strange lands with strange people and strange customs that oddly mirrored the world he lived and explained them from the point of view of Lemuel Gulliver, a man who fit into Swift’s time and Swift’s world but whose views of his world are changed by the oddities of the odd nations he visits and how their unusual behaviors reflect those of his people. The most commonly used and most famous image of Gulliver’s Travels is the scene where Gulliver is tied down by the miniature people of Lilliput who are at constant war with their enemies the Blefuscudians over which side of their egg they should open for their breakfast. Gulliver proves that he is not a threat to the Lilliputians and is allowed to live in the nation of small people provided that he does not step on them and is recruited to fight in the war as a super-weapon. Gulliver refuses this as he does not want to help in the domination of another country, this coupled with ‘making water’ in the capital in the form of public urination, an action that put out a fire and saved countless lives, Gulliver is put to trial, found guilty of ‘treason’, and is sentenced to be blinded but is helped by a friend to escape. The war between Lilliput and Blefuscudia over such a trivial thing as breakfast is Swift making fun of the long standing rivalry between England and France, thus making this leg of the journey a satire of politics. A satire which is continually stated when promotions in offices of state and military... ... middle of paper ... ..., nostalgic, and savage in all of the strange worlds he made Gulliver walk thought because he understood that humanity was small and foolish like the Lilliputians, large but morally conscious as the Brobdingnagians, able to make great advancements in science but not always without practicality like the Laputans, and like the Houyhnhnms and the Yahoos we continuously battle with our primitive and savage impulses while trying to perfect ourselves through the use of our reason. The unusually usual world around us with all of its odd oddities that we decide to deem even and all the abnormally normal things we do are the fuel for lies that tell truth, to tell it with harsh pen strokes and gentle paint brushes and to silently underlay the point of our message or explain the message of utter pointlessness. This was the craft of Swift and the craft I enjoy today.

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