The Importance Of Morality In Gulliver's Travels

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Jonathan Swift’s fictional series Gulliver’s Travels is a classic piece of literature that has been enjoyed for centuries around the world. Many readers, to whom this great work has brought much diversion, may not know that Swift did not write it purely for that purpose but also to speak his mind within the code of a satiric novel. Swift’s motives for writing “Gulliver’s Travels” include his desire to express his opinions of politics, the culture of science, and the corruption of mankind disguised by analogies and blurred by fiction. Describing himself as having a “perfect hatred for tyranny and oppression,” Swift exhibited resolute and unwavering efforts in pursuit of his political objectives, particularly his promotion of the welfare …show more content…

The author’s personality has been painted as “a harsh judge of humanity” (Wikipedia), a trait that can easily be recognized within the text. Swift lashes out at his own race when the story’s giant king, based on the common corruptions and atrocities within Gulliver’s description of Britain, cites the English as the “most pernicious race of odious little vermin that nature ever suffered to crawl upon the surface of the earth.” (Pg. 134) Further in the novel, Gulliver dwells among a race of horses that is perfect in virtue and completely unblemished by vice. Dishonesty is so foreign to these horses that they do not even have a word for “lying” in their vocabulary. They live in a kind of backwards world where the horses, called Houyhnyhnms, possess reason, while the Yahoos, who are the closest resemblances of humans in the region, are disgusting, savage beasts who display no signs of reason, not to mention a soul. Gulliver expresses his contempt for these Yahoos admitting: “I confess I never saw any sensitive being so detestable on all accounts; and the more I came near them, the more hateful they grew.” (Pg. 221) Perhaps this is one of Swift’s methods of lacerating humanity’s moral reputation: to suggest that horses may be more civilized than humans. After living among the exalted race of the Houyhnyhnms and consequently growing in disgust of the imperfections of his own people, Gulliver could not stand to go back to live among the savage “Yahoos” of Europe. Our protagonist is even unwilling to return to his own family as he explains: “I could not endure my wife or my children in my presence, the very smell of them was intolerable; much less could I suffer them to eat in the same room.” (Pg. 271) It may be that Swift’s stab at humanity in “Gulliver’s Travels” is intended to recognize the deep and wide crevice that lies between human nature, even that of good

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