Swift's A Modest Proposal

1006 Words3 Pages

In Swift’s “A Modest Proposal”, he proposes that children of the poor become a food source that could possibly balance the economic structure of the kingdom. Swift is aware of the scarcity of food, and he empathizes with the struggling and damaged mothers of Ireland throughout the poem. Being a well-rounded individual of education and wealth, his proposed plan for the commonwealth is quite appealing. His educational backgrounds include schooling from Kilkenny School followed by Trinity College in Dublin (Swift, pg. 2464). These opportunities afforded him the position of a satirist within a British church (2464). Swift’s strategy includes him mentioning how children are expensive and he explains how they aid in the economic decline of Ireland; …show more content…

Swift uses strategies like providing statistics and having scholarly proof such as the consumption of children elsewhere to persuade the audience. His proposal is appealing because it is a quick and easy means to an end of a problem,however it is inhumane. Swift constructed his proposal for those who were tired of not only looking at the impoverished of Ireland, but also those who were unable to handle the poor living off Ireland’s resources. He starts out explaining the issues of poor mothers that have three to six children, struggling to meet ends meet (Swift pg. 2633). The children of the poor are an economic burden not only to their parents, but also to Ireland’s economy. His proposal suggests that some children be saved for breeding and the others be sold on the market as a food source once they are a year old (pg. 2634). Swift backs his proposal with six key points. “First, there will be less papist in the country of Ireland. Second, the poor would be provided funds for economic stability. Third, new goods (meaning the children as meat) would burst the economy. Fourth, parents will gain money and not have to support their child after the first year. Fifth, the meat of the children would bring great customs to taverns. And sixth, there would be a greater demand for marriage and better child bearing practices” (pgs. 2636-37). Though Swift’s proposal may seem appalling, the means by which he proved his point are quite

Open Document