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Inception, contributory sources and original features of Gulliver.

The most famous of all Swift's works is Gulliver's Travels. The inception of the book has been traced to the celebrated Scriblerus club, which came into existence in the last months of Queen Anne's reign, when Swift joined with Arbuthnot, Pope, Gay and other members in a scheme to ridicule all false tastes in learning in “The Memoirs of Scriblerus”.

Travels into several remote Nations of the World, by Lemuel Gulliver, first a surgeon, and then a captain of several ships, was published anonymously at the end of October, 1726, negotiations with the publishers having been carried on by Swift's friends, Charles Ford and Erasmus Lewis.

The scheme, of the book has been known to us all from our childhood. Gulliver describes, in simple language suited to a seaman, his shipwreck in Lilliput, where the tallest people were six inches high. The emperor believed himself to be, and was considered, the delight and terror of the universe: but, how absurd it all appeared. In the second part, the voyage to Brobdingnag, the author's contempt for mankind is emphasized. Gulliver now found himself a dwarf among men sixty feet in height. The king, who regarded Europe as if it were an anthill, said, after many questions, "How, contemptible a thing was human grandeur, which could be mimicked by such diminutive common-sense and reason, justice and lenity. Finally, he said: "I cannot but conclude the bulk of your natives to be the most pernicious race of little odious vermin that Nature ever suffered to crawl upon the surface of the earth." But Gulliver remarks that allowances must be made for a king living apart from the rest of the world.

The third part of the book is, in many ways, less interesting, partly because it is less plausible, partly because the story is interrupted more often by personal attacks. The satire is chiefly on philosophers, projectors and inventors, men who are given to dwelling in the air, like the inhabitants of the Flying Island. If it be said that the attacks on the learned were unfair, it must be remembered that the country had recently gone through the experience of the South Sea Bubble, when no project was too absurd to be brought before the public. Unfortunately, Swift does not properly distinguish between pretenders to learning and those who were entitled to respect. In the Island of Sorcerers, Gulliver was able to call up famous men of ancient times and question them, with the result that he found the world to have been misled by prostitute writers to ascribe the greatest exploits in war to cowards, the wisest counsels to fools, sincerity to flatterers, piety to atheists. He saw, too, by looking at an old yeoman, how the race had gradually deteriorated, through vice and corruption. He found that the race of Struldbrugs or Immortals, so far from being happy, were the most miserable of all, enduring an endless dotage, and hated by their neighbours. We cannot but recall the sad closing years of Swift's own life; but the misery of his own end was due to mental disease and not to old age.



In the last part of Gulliver's Travels, the voyage to the country of the Houyhnhnms, Swift's satire is of the bitterest. Gulliver was now in a country where horses were possessed of reason, and were the governing class, while the Yahoos, though in the shape of men, were brute beasts, without reason and conscience. In endeavouring to persuade the Houyhnhnms that he was not a Yahoo, Gulliver is made to show how little a man is removed from the brute. Gulliver's account of warfare, given with no little pride, caused only disgust. Satire of the law and lawyers, and of the lust for gold, is emphasised by praise of the virtues of the Houyhnhnms, and of their learning. They were governed only by reason, love and courtship being unknown to them. Gulliver dreaded leaving a country for whose rulers he felt gratitude and respect, and, when he returned home, his family filled him with such disgust that he swooned when his wife kissed him. But what made him most impatient was to see "a lump of deformity, and diseases both in body and mind," filled with pride, a vice wholly unknown to the Houyhnhnms.

It is a terrible conclusion. All that can be said in reply to those who condemn Swift for writing it is that it was the result of disappointment, wounded pride, growing ill-health and sorrow caused by the sickness of the one whom he loved best in the world. There is nothing bitter in the first half of the work, and most readers find only amusement in it; everything is in harmony, and follows at once when the first premises are granted. But, in the attacks on the Yahoos, consistency is dropped; the Houyhnhnms are often prejudiced and unreasonable, and everything gives way to savage denunciation of mankind. It is only a cynic or a misanthrope who will find anything convincing in Swift's views.

Much has been written, in Germany and elsewhere, on the subject of Swift's indebtedness to previous writers. Rabelais's method is very different from Swift's, though Swift may have had in mind the kingdom of queen Quintessence when describing the academy of Lagado. The capture of Gulliver by the eagle and other incidents recall details in The Arabian Nights, then recently published in England. Swift had also read Lucian, The Voyage of Domingo Gonsalez and Cyrano de Bergerac's Histoires comiques and Voyage a la Lime. Whether he had also seen the History o/Savarambes (1677). or Foigny's Journey of Jacques Sadeur to Australia (1693). is more doubtful. The account of the storm in the second part was made up of phrases in Surmy's Mariners ' Magazine.


Date: 2015-12-24; view: 808


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