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Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift
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bookshelves: classics, literature, fantasy, audiobook, 1500-1799, classics-european, humor-and-satire

³¢±ð³Ù’s face ¾±³Ùâ€�.

Jonathan Swift was a snarky, snarky bitch.

Gulliver’s Travels is like a giant pimp slap across the human race face and I am so glad I finally read this in a non-school, non-structured environment because I had a whole lot more fun with it this time around. Swift’s wit, insight and delivery are often, though not always, remarkable and he crams more well thought out jabs and toe-steppings in this slim 250 page novel than I would have thought possible in a work twice this long. Ìý
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This is certainly a classic that I believe people should read and experience for themselves outside of any required scholarly endeavors because I think that many of the ills, injustices and idiocies that Swift addresses in this novel are still, unfortunately, very relevant today. While Swift is short on resolutions or ideas for improvement (one of my disappointments) he does a marvelous job of exposing the problems that he perceived as existing within the 18th Century world, most particularly England, and opening the door for a more expansive, popular discussion on these issues.

Kudos for that, Mr Swift.Ìý
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From a plot perspective, Gulliver’s Travels is a series of adventures by Lemuel Gulliver to various undiscovered, fictional worlds that act as a backdrop for Swift, through his main character/mouthpiece, to scathe, rebuke, poke fun at and/or question all manner of political, religious Ìýand social institutions, philosophies and groups. Everything from blind adherence to political ideologies or religious dogma, to ideological intolerance, to arbitrary social divisions and even the non-practical aspects of the rampant scientific explorations so in vogue at the time. Few groups were spared from Swift's caustic lens and many of his attacks are vehement bordering on brutal.Ìý

Good. That is how such a work should be IMHO.Ìý
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Overall, I thought this was very worthwhile and many of Swift’s commentaries were piercing, Ìýbrilliant and exceptionally well done. Some of my personal favorites include:Ìý
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** Parodying the massive waste of energy and resources expended in political infighting in Great Britain between the Whigs and Tories by having the two Lilliputian political parties separated solely by the aesthetic choice between wearing high heels and low heels. I can only imagine how this parody played out among the MP of England at the time.Ìý
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** Making light of the tremendous importance placed on seemingly trivial differences in religious doctrine that often lead to the most acrimonious wars and civil strife by explaining that the genesis of a long and bloody war between rival factions of Lilliputians stems from a disagreement over where to crack eggs. One group break their eggs on the small end (Small Endians) and the other break their eggs on the large end (Big Endians). What I found most clever about this attack was the use of an ambiguous reference in each side's “holy book� that states, “all true believers break their eggs at the convenient end.� That is just about perfect satire Mr. Swift.
Ìý
** A biting jab at traditions and customs that people cling to long after there is no practical reason to do so is eloquently made when Gulliver describes the Lilliputians custom of burying their dead head first.
They bury their dead with their heads directly downwards, because they hold an opinion that in eleven thousand moons they are all to rise again, in which period the earth (which they conceive to be flat) will turn upside down, and by this means they shall, at their resurrection, be found ready standing on their feet. The learned among them confess the absurdity of this doctrine, but the practice still continues, in compliance to the vulgar.
When Swift is on his game, he is very, very effective.

** A wonderful anti-war statement is made through the horror and disgust with which the King of the giant Brobdingnagians (their size depicted as representing moral superiority) reacts to Gulliver’s description of gunpowder and his offer to teach the Brobdingnagians the formula for producing it:
I told him of ‘an invention, discovered between three and four hundred years ago, to make a certain powder…[t]hat a proper quantity of this powder…would drive a ball of iron or lead, with such violence and speed, as nothing was able to sustain its force. That the largest balls thus discharged, would not only destroy whole ranks of an army at once, but batter the strongest walls to the ground, sink down ships, with a thousand men in each, to the bottom of the sea, and when linked together by a chain, would cut through masts and rigging, divide hundreds of bodies in the middle, and lay all waste before them. That we often put this powder into large hollow balls of iron, and discharged them by an engine into some city we were besieging, which would rip up the pavements, tear the houses to pieces, burst and throw splinters on every side, dashing out the brains of all who came near�
...The king was struck with horror at the description I had given of those terrible engines, and the proposal I had made. ‘He was amazed, how so impotent and groveling an insect as I…could entertain such inhuman ideas, and in so familiar a manner, as to appear wholly unmoved at all the scenes of blood and desolation which I had painted as the common effects of those destructive machines; whereof,� he said, ‘some evil genius, enemy to mankind, must have been the first contriver.� As for himself, he protested, that although few things delighted him so much as new discoveries in art or in nature, yet he would rather lose half his kingdom, than be privy to such a secret; which he commanded me, as I valued any life, never to mention any more.
Sorry for the long quote, but I thought that was a particularly moving passage.
Ìý
** My personal favorite (purely from an enjoyment standpoint) is the depiction of the scientifically adept and common-senseless Laputans Ìýwho exemplify Swift’s serious gripe against scientific research that doesn’t have a practical and foreseeable benefit to society.
The first man I saw was of a meagre aspect, with sooty hands and face…[H]e has been eight years upon a project for extracting sunbeams out of cucumbers, which were to be put in phials hermetically sealed, and let out to warm the air in raw inclement summers. He told me, he did not doubt, that, in eight years more, he should be able to supply the governor’s gardens with sunshine, at a reasonable rate�.
Gulliver’s exploration of the scientific academy of Laputa was my favorite part of the novel and I thought Swift’s satiric chops were at there sharpest in relaying the societal dysfunction of the Laputans.Ìý
Ìý
Now I must drop some ice in the bath water.Ìý

As much as there was to enjoy in this work, I was not as blown away by it as I would have liked to have been. For one thing, I thought that Swift’s prose was merely serviceable and I didn’t find much in the way of eloquence in his delivery. It was missing the ear-pleasing lyrical quality that I have come to expect when reading classic literature. The writing wasn’t bad by any means but it wasn’t as enjoyable or memorable as I had hoped. This may be an unfair critique given that this book’s legacy lies with its content, but the lack of beautiful prose kept me from being able to enjoy the interludes and non-meaty passages of the work. ÌýÌý
Ìý
Also, some of Swift’s critiques fell a bit flat and didn't resonate with me as much as those mentioned above. For instance, the recasting of famous historical figures like Alexander, Hannibal and Caesar as being more subject to the moral frailties of the human animal than the established texts would have us believe. Swift uses this as the springboard to discuss the less than wholesome practices of securing political power today and that is a good thing. I just found the use of the legends of antiquity unnecessary and not particularly effective. That’s probably a personal bias of mine as I have always found those figures fascinating to read about. ÌýÌý
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Here's my biggest problem. One of the principal arguments that Swift makes in his novel is that balance and moderation are the keys to success both individually and as a people. Extremes of behavior and belief are the seeds from which disastrous consequences are born, according to Swift. That’s easy to say and it has an attractive ring to it, but I wish Swift had done a little more with it. This walkmy right into my biggest complaint about the story…the ending.
Ìý
I thought that the ambiguity of Gulliver’s condition at the end of the novel was a bit of a cop out. It appears as though the reader is left to determine whether Gulliver was (1) a man disgusted with humanity as a result of his exposure to the morally righteous and logically rational Houyhnhnm or (2) a man whose ill-conceived and intemperate worship of, and infatuation with the Houyhnhnm made him just another unbalanced yahoo whose loss of perspective and left him deranged. Ìý
Ìý
Part of the answer of this would stem from determining whether Swift was holding up the Houyhnhnms as a model to follow or whether their own passionless adherence to logic was itself a subject of parody. However, as with the end, I think Swift was less than certain of his position (or of the position he wanted to state) and thus left too much ambiguity to the reader.
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Now I understand that often these kinds of soft endings are perfect as they allow the reader to interpret the work for themselves. However, here where Swift has been bludgeoning the reader with his opinions throughout the entire work, to suddenly punt and not clearly express a case for his protagonist seems to be a miss.
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That said, I am the first to acknowledge that it is anywhere from a distinct possibility to a metaphysical certainty that the “missâ€� here is on my part, but that was how I saw it. I wanted Swift to wrap up and summarize the effect of the journey on Gulliver and provide a statement about what should be drawn from his experience so that a better road could be paved for using his travels to address the problems on which it shined its light. Ìý
Ìý
3.0 to 3.5 stars. Still…HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!
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Reading Progress

August 25, 2008 – Shelved
January 23, 2012 – Started Reading
January 30, 2012 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-50 of 63 (63 new)


message 1: by seak (new) - added it

seak Just put this on my Kindle for a nice Free-99.


message 2: by Ian (new)

Ian Nice review. Certainly makes me want to read the book again, outside of any academic context. Thanks!


Stephen Seak (Bryce L.) wrote: "Just put this on my Kindle for a nice Free-99."

Well worth it, my friend. I hope you like it.


Stephen Ian wrote: "Nice review. Certainly makes me want to read the book again, outside of any academic context. Thanks!"

My pleasure, Ian. I hope you have a good experience with it.


Stephen Kat wrote: "Really good points. The only thing I might add is that Swift's portrayal of women implies that he thinks we chicks have Brobdingnagian sized cooties, so feminist gals might have a little trouble e..."

Kat, I admit that I normally give race and gender issues a bit of a pass when reading the classics because so many of them have issues that, while disagreeable today, were par for the course then. I usually will notice really egregious issues and don't recall my protective "daddy of two perfect girls" alarm going off on this one, but I could have missed it. What was your biggest gripe about this vis a vis women?


Richard Stephen wrote: "I thought that the ambiguity of Gulliver’s condition at the end of the novel was a bit of a cop out. It appears as though the reader is left to determine whether Gulliver was (1) a man disgusted with humanity as a result of his exposure to the morally righteous and logically rational Houyhnhnm or (2) a man whose ill-conceived and intemperate worship of, and infatuation with the Houyhnhnm made him just another unbalanced yahoo whose loss of perspective and left him deranged.

Maybe Gulliver had a little from column a and a little from column b. And maybe all Swift was trying to convey with the Houyhnhnms was that people would be better off if they used a bit more horse sense.


Stephen Nice call on the horse sense, I would certainly buy that. As for Gulliver, I thought Swift owed me a little more than "a dash of both and away with you" by the end of the travels. Can't help but call cop out on that one.


message 8: by Richard (last edited Jan 31, 2012 07:18AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Richard Stephen wrote: "Nice call on the horse sense, I would certainly buy that. As for Gulliver, I thought Swift owed me a little more than "a dash of both and away with you" by the end of the travels. Can't help but ca..."

I see your point Stephen, but I'm not sure it's as much of a problem as you're making it. It's been too long ago since I've read Gulliver for me to do a good analysis. But I think that Lemuel (whose name, ironically, is that of a biblical sage), might have a gift for languages but as far as his personal life is concerned, he isn't too Swift on the uptake. He acts in a somewhat unbalanced way after the first two voyages as well--maybe that's Swift's way of preparing the reader for the ending.

My personal hunch is that options one and two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive. So his glimpse of the Houyhnhnms' wisdom and the idea of himself as a yahoo are accurate but too much for his sanity to handle, so that he can no longer live comfortably in English society. So he is like a moth flying too close to the flame.

BTW, even though I disagree on this point, I still loved the review. I grew up thinking of this as a children's book, because I had a heavily abridged "children's edition" that included only the first two voyages (Liliput and Brobdingnag). Your review shows that this is so much more than "Gulliver's Adventures with Wee Folk and Giant Folk," i.e. a social, religious and political satire. So thanks for that.


message 9: by Mark (new)

Mark This is one of those books which i thought I had read but thinking about it, one hears so much about it from anthologies or quotations or other texts I think it is just that I may have absorbed 'bits'. Maybe i should end the doubt and get down and read it. Great review as always


message 10: by Tilly (new)

Tilly Slaton *blinks*

Ok, I admit it. I love your reviews. Moreso, it is nice to read the opinions that aren't complete drivel. What that said ... I do believe ... I will have to wait until I have at least one cup of coffee in my system before I check goodreads in the morning :)


message 11: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus I just found the use of the legends of antiquity unnecessary and not particularly effective.

Will you dislike me extremely if I offer a reason for this, that makes Swift's point?

Classical education in England bore down heavy on the great heroes of the past as proto-Englishmen, as models and exemplars of what human nobility could achieve even *without* being English if a man was great enough. These men were summoned at every great occasion in English life, and were part of the furniture of the educated English mind. Had Swift left them out of his argument, he'd've been thought either uneducated or, worse, unable to sustain his argument.

Swift writes, "As soon as I entered the house, my wife took me in her arms and kissed me; at which, having not been used to the touch of that odious animal for so many years, I fell in a swoon for almost an hour."

But Kat...Lemuel (no accident he's named for the Biblical sage associated with chastity, temperance, and mercy) has just left the Houhnynhms or however you spell that whinny, he thinks all humans are grotesque and disgusting! (Stockholm Syndrome, anyone?)

Anyway, I really enjoyed your review, and hope you won't get out your flensing knife for our next encounter....


message 12: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus That sadness, that sense of Lemuel as a man of no country because he'd changed out of all fit with the world he'd left, is probably one of the unsung reasons this book's survived in pop culture.

Poor Swift. A man out of time. At least he left us a lighthouse to steer by.


Stephen Richard wrote: "My personal hunch is that options one and two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive. So his glimpse of the Houyhnhnms' wisdom and the idea of himself as a yahoo are accurate but too much for his sanity to handle, so that he can no longer live comfortably in English society. So he is like a moth flying too close to the flame. "

An excellent point, my friend. I shall ponder it and see if my brain can integrate it.


Stephen Mark wrote: "This is one of those books which i thought I had read but thinking about it, one hears so much about it from anthologies or quotations or other texts I think it is just that I may have absorbed 'bits'. Maybe i should end the doubt and get down and read it. Great review as always."

Thanks, Mark. This is certainly worth tackling.


Stephen Tilly wrote: "*blinks*

Ok, I admit it. I love your reviews. Moreso, it is nice to read the opinions that aren't complete drivel. What that said ... I do believe ... I will have to wait until I have at least ..."


Thanks, Tilly. I'm glad you like it. Man do I understand about the coffee too. That is essential morning fare.


Stephen Kat wrote: "Swift writes, "As soon as I entered the house, my wife took me in her arms and kissed me; at which, having not been used to the touch of that odious animal for so many years, I fell in a swoon for almost an hour.")

I think Richard already addressed this (I am still making my way through the comments) but I think this had more to do with his general disgust with all of humanity after leaving the Houhnynhms.


Stephen Richard wrote: "Classical education in England bore down heavy on the great heroes of the past as proto-Englishmen, as models and exemplars of what human nobility could achieve even *without* being English if a man was great enough. These men were summoned at every great occasion in English life, and were part of the furniture of the educated English mind. Had Swift left them out of his argument, he'd've been thought either uneducated or, worse, unable to sustain his argument."

That makes perfect sense, sensei. Thank you, as always, for your insight. *puts flensing knife away and nods head approvingly*


Stephen Richard wrote: "Poor Swift. A man out of time. At least he left us a lighthouse to steer by."

Well said. I think I am going to read A Modest Proposal for my next Swift.


message 19: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus *whew* Well, as the flensing knife has gone away, here is your key to the clown-proof bunker.


Stephen Can a bring A Modest Proposal with me or is that inappropriate with man-eating clowns outside?


message 21: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus Stephen wrote: "Can a bring A Modest Proposal with me or is that inappropriate with man-eating clowns outside?"

Suits the mood, somehow, doesn't it?

I'll offer one comment before you begin reading: Do not expect the same experience as Gulliver's Travels, and be *sure* you have your 18th-century hat on.


Richard I'm getting a weird feeling we've had a conversation like this before:




message 23: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Huston Terrific review!


Stephen Rebecca wrote: "Terrific review!"

Thanks, Rebecca.


message 25: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus Richard wrote: "I'm getting a weird feeling we've had a conversation like this before:

"


Ahhh...The Simpsons...America's most subversive TV program. Bart speaketh sooth.


Stephen I would argue that South Park has the edge on the Simpsons...and just about everything else.


message 27: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus I think I was too old when South Park came out, for its greatness to manifest itself to me.


Stephen It's on my top 5 for greatest TV shows ever and it doesn't seem to be slowing down any after all these years.


 ~Geektastic~ Stephen wrote: "I would argue that South Park has the edge on the Simpsons...and just about everything else."

South Park vs. current Simpsons? Sure. South Park vs. mid-nineties Simpsons? I will have to respectfully disagree.


Stephen I think I've always been a member of Team South Park. I like the Simpsons (especially the early stuff) but South Park has always been more my humor. Now, of course, I am a big Archer fan so who knows where that one will end up on the list.


 ~Geektastic~ Stephen wrote: "I think I've always been a member of Team South Park. I like the Simpsons (especially the early stuff) but South Park has always been more my humor. Now, of course, I am a big Archer fan so who kno..."

Archer is great.


message 32: by Riku (new) - rated it 5 stars

Riku Sayuj I too was so glad when I read it a few years ago... I think they ruin us into complacency by feeding us classics when too young.


Stephen Riku wrote: "I too was so glad when I read it a few years ago... I think they ruin us into complacency by feeding us classics when too young."

I completely agree, Riku. I am rediscovering so many classics lately that I just love.


message 34: by Brian (new)

Brian Stephen wrote: "Richard wrote: "Poor Swift. A man out of time. At least he left us a lighthouse to steer by."

Well said. I think I am going to read A Modest Proposal for my next Swift."


I love "A Modest Proposal." I read it with my senior lit class. I think you will really like it.


Stephen Thanks, Brian. I have been wanting to read that for a while but wanted to get through this one first.


Stephen Kerrie wrote: "In response to your disappointment that Swift didn't present any ideas of resolution or improvement to the problems he points out, I was gonna say that he was full of unhelpful solutions in A Modest Proposal. He just liked being a snarky bitch.
"


That's my next Swift to read. After I read A Modest Proposal and you read this, we can compare which one was Swift at his snarkiest.


message 37: by carol. (new)

carol. Nice review. You almost tempt me to re-read. Alas, too little time and too many books!


message 38: by Richard (last edited Feb 02, 2012 09:06AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Richard Stephen wrote: "Kerrie wrote: "In response to your disappointment that Swift didn't present any ideas of resolution or improvement to the problems he points out, I was gonna say that he was full of unhelpful solut..."

You're going on a snark hunt? That's great, but keep in mind that, although the The Hunting of the Snark falls under the general umbrella of British humour, it is in reality a different genre, author and time period altogether.


Stephen Carol wrote: "Nice review. You almost tempt me to re-read. Alas, too little time and too many books!"

Damn...I should have offered tacos as well. You wouldn't have been able to resist then.


Stephen Richard wrote: "You're going on a snark hunt?"

First, we must study the ways of the snark, learn how it lives and what its tendancies are. Only then will we be prepared to hunt the snark.


message 41: by carol. (new)

carol. Stephen wrote: "First, we must study the ways of the snark, learn how it lives and what its tendancies are. Only then will we be prepared to hunt the snark."

I believe a small sub-population lives on GR.

oops, I exposed myself


Richard Carol wrote: "I believe a small sub-population lives on GR.
oops, I exposed myself ..."


In exchange for some insider information on the ways of the snark, we might be persuaded to help you relocate to a protected habitat. :)


message 43: by carol. (new)

carol. I'm reasonable sure I found this in one of my Audubon guides: "The snark, Sarcasticus intellectualis and it's well known but lesser cousin, Sarcasticus trollis, were at one time found largely in paper habitats and occasionally in meeting halls, but have since bowed to evolutionary pressure and are found primarily in internet habitats."

There's more, but first I need a guaranteed writ of protection.


message 44: by Richard (new)

Richard Derus I fear, Carol, your copy of Audubon was gin-soaked or something equally likely, as the entry continues:

"Sarcasticus ecclisiasticus and Sarcasticus solonicus, known as the Sacerdotal Snark and the Politicianbird respectively, are the most over-populated of the snark family, and their wild, unchecked reproduction and insanely greedy feeding habits have rendered much of the Internet unsafe for normal travel. Extreme care is advised when faced with these birds. An aggressive, barely sub-lethal response is the only proven means for these vicious predators not to leave the normal Internet traveler with viruses, welts, and a screaming case of Censoriphobic Hydrosuspiration, or the sense of drowning in idiot regulation and restriction of what shouldn't be anyone else's goddam business."


message 45: by carol. (new)

carol. *chortle*

I believe you are right, my pages seem to be significantly alcohol watermarked. I will have to buy a new copy immediately.


Saivarshini i dont like this book....according to me he describes a lot!!!! its boring!!!!


message 47: by Cattistle (new) - added it

Cattistle


message 48: by Cattistle (new) - added it

Cattistle


Riley I love your review (as well as the discussion it generated) -- it encompassed pretty much all I had to say (and more!!) after having read it once over outside a purely academic environment.


message 50: by Mark (new) - added it

Mark Collins Where can I read this book?


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