Gullivers Travels: A Severe Indictment on Human Nature Through Satire

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An English Literature classic, Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels (1726) follows the sub-genre of traveler tales and presents a severe indictment on human nature through satire. Swift uses satire in Part IV – “A Voyage to the Country of the Houyhnhnms” to represent the human and animal entities. In the fourth voyage, Swift is indicting the human species but a deeper reading of the text reveals that perhaps Swift is also satirizing the Houyhnhnms and the protagonist traveler, Gulliver. Swift is ridiculing Gulliver and his ideals that make him perceive the Houyhnhnms as a rational and intelligent species as compared to the Yahoos, the humans.

The following discussion examines the representation of the Houyhnhnms and the Yahoos as examples used by Swift to explain the human condition. However, the paper iterates the stand that Swift maintained a conscious distance between him and the protagonist, Gulliver, and therefore, each has a different perception of humanity. The paper also focuses on the use of satire, irony and metaphor as tools to draw comparison between the vices and indifferent attitude of human nature.

It is necessary to understand the dichotomy between the opinions of Gulliver and Swift for a critical reading of fourth voyage. A reader needs to disassociate or alienate the perceptions and opinions of Gulliver’s as his own and not necessarily of the author Swift. By the time Gulliver reaches the end of his journey and before being saved by the captain of the Portuguese ship named Pedro de Mendez, his character undergoes several tones of change and in the end, the readers see him as an obnoxious misanthrope, an object of ridicule. Again, to identify and accept the intelligence of the Houyhnhnms (the horses) and the ...

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...tands human behaviour profoundly and tries to enlighten the readers and motivate them out of their complacent position, and endeavour to reach the pinnacle of human capabilities. Indeed, Swift does not intend the whole of humanity to adopt Gulliver’s passive attitude and withdraw from humanity completely.

What Swift intends is to shock people out of their pride and shed away every strand of deceit. In other words, humans should not think of themselves as completely virtuous or completely evil. The “judicious reader” is left with the responsibility of analyzing their human condition and find out a midway between becoming Houyhnhnms and Yahoos.

References:

1. Bullitt, John M. Jonathan Swift and the Anatomy of Satire. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1966.

2. Swift, Jonathan. Gulliver’s Travels. New York: Signet Classics of Penguin Publishers, pub. 1999.

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