Many of the critics who have critiqued Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels have used the
word extraneous more then once. Swift was viewed as an insane person who was a failure
in life. But this is far from the truth. Swift wrote Gulliver's Travels, a book that
has been assigned to students for years, and it is written from experience. Swift's
experience with the Tories and their conflicts with the Whigs caused him to write books
that mock religious beliefs, government, or people with views differing from his own. In
one of these books, Gulliver's Travels, Swift criticizes the corruption of the English
government, society, science, religion, and man in general.
In Gulliver's first travel, in which he visited Lilliput, Gulliver is faced with the
minute people, called Lilliputians. Now while this is the premise for a fantasy story,
Swift uses the events within to make severe criticisms of England between reigns of Queen
Anne and George the first. The people of Lilliput are about six inches tall, and there
size signifies that their motives, acts, and humanity are in the same, dwarfish (Long
276). In this section, the royal palace is accidentally set on fire, containing the
empress inside. Instead of making his way across town, to the ocean, squashing the
people of Lilliput as he goes, Gulliver makes use of his urine to save the palace. While
this vulgar episode was a display of bravery, it infuriated the emperor, causing revenge
to be vowed on Gulliver. Rather then be happy that both the emperor and the palace are
not in ruin, the littleness of the government and the
people in general is displayed in this act. Another display of this is the fact that
Gulliver is used as the Emperor's absolute weapon, but the emperor only uses him to
conquer his world of two islands. This makes the emperor's ambition seem extremely low
(Bloom, Interpretations 84-5).
Swift also criticizes the religious beliefs of the Lilliputians and England in the
first story. In Lilliput, Ministers were chosen strictly on agility, or their ability to
walk a tightrope or stick jumping. They were able to maintain their rank of minister as
long as they could keep these defeating these tasks (Swift, Writings 89).
The political parties of the English government are represented by the conservative High
Heels who depict the Tories, and the progressive Low Heels, or Whigs. As per their
names, the distinguishing mark of the parties is the height of their heels. Within these
two parties, Swift criticizes the English political parties, and the Prince of Wales
(Brady 21). Swift also mocks the religion war that was going on in England, through the
use of the war between Lilliput, and its nearest neighbor, Blefuscu. Swift's use of the
terms High Heels and Low Heels to compare the meaningless battles of the Whigs and
Tories, such as the height of heels (Swift, Writings 81).
With Gulliver's next travel, we find him in Brobdingnag. His voyage shows us the filthy
mental and physical characteristics of man. Here, Gulliver is confronted with an adult
nurse. The nurse's repulsive action of revealing her breasts to Gulliver. This reminds
him of how the Lilliputians found his skin full of crater like pores, and stumps of hair
growing from them. The odor of the immense creatures is offending, and it caused
Gulliver to recall the fact that the Lilliputians were also offended of his body odor
(Bloom, Interpretations 27-8).
In Laputa, Gulliver is confronted with the old age Struldbuggs, which look utterly
hideous resulting from old age, and the deterioration of their bodies. The Yahoos from
the land of Houyhnhnms are filthy, uncivilized creatures, who use their own dung as a
weapon. In these descriptions, Swift criticizes both the moral and physical corruption
of man (Bloom, Critical Views 87).
Gulliver's first owner in Brobdingnag represents the selfishness of man. Gulliver is
constantly displayed in public, abused for the profit of the owner. When his owner finds
out that Gulliver is weakening, he sells him immediately, at a high price in order to
milk every last penny out of Gulliver.
Gulliver's third voyage, to the floating island of Laputa is one of the most satirical
of the whole book. In this voyage Swift criticizes the Royal Society of England, in
which he says is composed of useless philosophers, inventors, and scientists. The
floating island signifies that the inhabitants are composed of the same airy constitution
as the environment (Long 276). Projects done by such people are summed up by "the
Universal Artist," who directs his followers to turn useful things into the exact
opposite, which results in useless achievements. Some of the experiments held were to
create tangible air, wool-less sheep, and horses with stone hooves. The flying island
itself expresses not only the desertion on the common earth of reality but their
conversion of the universe to a mechanism and of living to a mechanical process (Bloom,
Interpretations 53).
Finally, Gulliver travels to the land of the Houyhnhnms. After he reaches land,
Gulliver comes across a pack of Yahoos and is instantly appalled by them. There he
quotes, "Upon the whole, I never beheld in all my travels so disagreeable and animal, or
one against which I naturally conceived so strong an antipathy" (Swift, Text 215). This
statement is at best ironic, because Gulliver never saw the resemblances between the
Yahoos, and himself. Afterwards, he encounters the rational Houyhnhnms and he
immediately realizes the common characteristics he has in common with the Yahoos. He
states, "my horror and astonishment are not to be described, when I observed, in this
abdominal animal, a perfect human figure" (Swift, Text 220).
Gulliver is amazed to see rational figures acting in such brutal figures, but he later
realizes that they regarded him as the brutal beast. The Houyhnhnms compare Gulliver and
the Yahoos and find many similarities between the two. The only difference was that
Gulliver, and mankind, had learned the benefits of clothing, and he, at times could be a
rational creature.
Swift portrays the Yahoos as savage animals with human characteristics, which is the
biggest mockery of mankind in the whole book. The Yahoos were so greedy, that they would
fight over enough food to feed an entire army of fifty soldiers, just to keep it to
themselves. They would poison their own bodies, by sucking a root, similar to alcohol,
to reach a high. The female population of the Yahoos are also given characteristics of
the ladies of the royal stature. Their gestures of hiding behind bushes and trees,
looking at the passing by males, gives the impression of a woman hiding her face behind a
fan, while looking flirtatiously over her shoulder. The smell associated with the female
Yahoos, is similar to the perfume ladies wear to attract men (Brady 108). By the time
Gulliver is returned to England, he becomes a complete antisocial, who is disgusted by
the sight of his own wife and children. Gulliver's desire to become a Houyhnhnm gives
the reader the impression that he is a pathetic man, who strives to become someone he can
never be.
Through Gulliver, Jonathan Swift travels to four different foreign countries, each
representing a corrupt part of England. Swift criticizes the corruption of these parts,
and focuses on the government, society, science, religion, and man. Not only does swift
criticize the customs of each country, he mocks the naive man who has the inability to
figure out the double meaning of things. Gulliver, being gullible himself, believes
everything he is told, which symbolizes the irony of the English system.
Works Cited
Harold, Bloom, ed. Modern Critical Views, Jonathan Swift. New York: Chelsea House
Publishers, 1986.
Brady, Frank, ed. Twentieth Century Interpretation of Gulliver's Travels. Englewood
Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1968.
Swift, Jonathan. Gulliver's Travels, and other Writings. New York: Bantam Books, Inc.,
1962.
Harold, Bloom, ed. Modern Critical Interpretations of Gulliver's Travels. New York:
Chelsea House Publishers, 1986.
Long, William J. "Jonathan Swift," English Literature. Boston, Mass.: Ginn and Company,
1964.
Swift, Jonathan. Gulliver's Travels, An Annotated Text with Critical Essays. United
States: W.W. Norton and Company, Inc., 1961.
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