Satire
Satire
Satire
ABSTRACT
Satire is a genre of literature in which vices, follies, abuses, and shortcomings
are held up to ridicule, ideally with the intent of shaming individuals, and society
itself, into improvement. Writers of the Augustan Age were revered for their wit
and satirical works as they managed to portray the evils of their period through
it. This paper discusses with Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift have portrayed
society through satire. It also shows the style and significance, the similarities
and dissimilarities in their use of satire. The main focus of this study will be on
Alexander Pope’s The Rape of the Lock and Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels,
in terms of their satirical elements. In The Rape of the Lock, Pope satirizes the
aristocratic women and men, their activities, the professional judges and
politicians of the day etc. On the other hand, through Gulliver's Travels, Swift
attempted to satirize the pride of the eighteenth century English people as well as
human as species on earth. The methodology used in this study is analytic.
1. INTRODUCTION
Most of the literature contains the writers' ideas of the social criticism. One of the most
prominent forms used to bring reform or change in the society or in individuals is that of
satire. “Satire is a literary technique in which behaviors or institutions are ridiculed for
the purpose of improving society.” (Applebee, 1997, p. 584). This study compares the
use of satire between Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift and deals with Pope’s famous
mock epic The Rape of the Lock and Swift’s novel Gulliver’s Travels. Pope wrote this
mock epic in order to satirize English aristocracy in general and a specific event between
two prominent Catholic families. Whereas, Swift's satire is inspired by what seems to be
a general hatred of mankind. Gulliver’s Travels, along with other Eighteenth Century
∗
Senior Lecturer, Department of English, Manarat International University, Gulshan, Dhaka. Email:
msultana_sust@yahoo.com
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satirical literature carried a higher purpose, with an explicit moral intention; it functioned
as a method of constructive social criticism. Swift was a man of piercing intellect and this
intellect showed the chaos, confusion and corruption of the eighteenth-century England.
This paper intends to focus on the similarities and dissimilarities of these two authors in
their use of satire.
In the essay “Satire in 18th Century British Society: Alexander Pope's The Rape of the
Lock and Jonathan Swift's A Modest Proposal”, Jonathan J. Szwec says, “Satires during
this period aimed to point out the shortcomings of society through ridiculing accepted
standards of thought, exposing Britain’s flaws and chastising the hypocrisy of the time.
Enlightenment writers Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift used different mediums of
satire, different types of logic, and different targets of ridicule in order to shine a light on
separate aspects of British society, providing much-needed criticism of the profuse moral
corruption of a society that sometimes seemed to forget the true ideals of its age.”
Jonathan J. Szwec also says, “The satirical works of Pope and Swift express their
authors’ profound dissatisfaction with their society. Literature that pushes for reform of
any kind, social or political, acts, along with entrenched tradition itself, as a dialectic
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force; it is the synthesis of that which is and that which is wanted that nudges society to a
certain direction. Both Pope and Swift used their considerable literary talents to
illuminate contemporary society, forcing them to acknowledge the shortcomings of the
neoclassical period. Through The Rape of the Lock and Gulliver’s Travels, Pope and
Swift respectively aspired to influence the British mindset of their age and inspire it to
move forward into a new era of true enlightenment with regards to social and political
morality.”
Ewald in The Masks of Jonathan Swift, states that, "As a satire, the main purpose of
Gulliver's Travels is to show certain shortcomings in 18th century English society."
[Ewald, 151]
According to Robert P. Fitzgerald, “Ironically but just as assertively, Swift is telling what
he took to be the most important kind of truth, moral truth about human nature and
human history, for which the fantasy provides a vehicle.”
2. METHODOLOGY
This study follows the method of descriptive analysis. This study has been depended
upon available facts, ideas and opinions have been gathered in the course of this research.
The sources which have been used are as follows:
a. Primary sources: The Rape of the Lock by Alexander Pope and
Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift.
b. Secondary sources: Available comments, discussions, reviews etc. on the
primary sources are considered here as secondary sources.
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famous satire is The Rape of the Lock. In literature, any bitter and ironic criticism of
contemporary persons and institutions is termed Juvenalian satire. Swift is an excellent
example of the second style: of harsh, contemptuous Juvenalian satire his most famous
satire is Gulliver's Travels.
Pope’s satire is unique, intellectual and full of wit and epigram. The Rape of the Lock has
been an excellent medium of his reflecting a complete picture of the 18th century
fashionable English society. The inspiration for the poem was an actual incident among
Pope’s acquaintances in which Robert, Lord Petre, cut off a lock of Arabella Fermor’s
hair, and the young people’s families fell into strife as a result.
Jonathan Swift was an Anglo-Irish satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer, poet and cleric
who became Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. Swift is probably the foremost prose
satirist in the English language. In showing Swift's satire of the social condition, the
discussion of Lemuel Gulliver's voyages to four different lands becomes symbolic and
significant.
Pope satirizes man’s nature that is always weak at beauty. Men sacrifice everything at the
altar of beauty and even the most intelligent man behaves foolishly when he falls a victim
to beauty. The opening lines of the poem introduce the reader to the satirical stance he is
taking towards the society portrayed in the poem. Pope says,
“What dire Offence from am'rous Causes springs,
What mighty Contests rise from trivial Things,”
[The Rape of the Lock: I.1-2]
In order to make his satire sharper and effective, Pope introduces the aerial machinery,
which facilitates the satire. He satirizes women who are interested in fashionable life and
who go on exercising their evil influence even after their death. He satirizes women of
fiery, coquettish mischievous and yielding nature and gives them different names. Pope
says,
“A Beau and Witling perish'd in the Throng,
One dy'd in Metaphor, and one in Song.”
[The Rape of the Lock: V. 703-704]
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The satire in the Rape of the Lock is directed not against any individual, but against the
follies and vanities in general of fashionable men and women. Belinda is not Arabella
Fermor. She is the type of the fashionable ladies. The Baron represents not Petre alone
but typifies the aristocratic gentleman of that age. The strange battle between the sexes
shows what kind of people they are. In the poem, Pope says,
“When bold Sir Plume had drawn Clarissa down,
Chloe stept in, and kill'd him with a Frown;
She smil'd to see the doughty Hero slain,
But at her Smile, the Beau reviv'd again.”
[The Rape of the Lock: V. 711-714]
He satirized those friends whose friendship is lust, those politicians who do not have a
deeper insight and cannot see beyond the shows and take steps just for their own
interests. It is in fact a satire on feminine dandies. Women are all frivolous beings, whose
genuine interest lies in love-making. It paints the ideal life of the pleasure-seeking young
men and women. These pleasures are petty – flirting, card-laying, driving in Hyde Park,
visiting theatres and writing love-letters.
Pope satirizes of the husbands and wives of the day. Husbands think that their wives have
been merry making with their lovers. Wives are also not virtuous at all. They love their
lap-dogs more than their husbands. And the death of husbands is not more shocking than
the death of a lap dog or the breakage of a china vessel. He says,
“Not louder Shrieks to pitying Heav'n are cast,
When Husbands or when Lap-dogs breath their last,”
[The Rape of the Lock: III. 447-448]
The gallants of the time are not spared by Pope. They are the target of mockery which is
as sharp and keen as the satire on the ladies. Baron not only represents Petre but also
typifies the aristocratic gallants of the age. Sir Plume's affectations are ridiculed with
reference to his amber snuff-box and his spotted cane. We laugh at his "unthinking face"
and his habit of excessive swearing. He says,
“With tender Billet-doux he lights the Pyre,
And breathes three am'rous Sighs to raise the Fire.
Then prostrate falls, and begs with ardent Eyes
Soon to obtain, and long possess the Prize:”
[The Rape of the Lock: II. 189-192]
It was a common practice among the young gallants and lords to approach a sweet lady
of the equal status. They proposed love and marriage to her. And it was at the will of the
lady to accept or reject this amorous offer. It was customary to play flirt among men and
the women alike.
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The moral bankruptcy of the ladies is further ridiculed when Thalestris points out the
need for sacrificing everything, even chastity, for the sake of maintaining a good
reputation. Virtue might be lost, but not a good name. Pope says,
“Honour forbid! at whose unrival'd Shrine
Ease, Pleasure, Virtue, All, our Sex resign.”
[The Rape of the Lock: IV. 573-574]
The poet also makes fun of Belinda by telling us that, when she wakes up, her
eyes first open on a love-letter in which the writer has spoken of "wounds, charms, and
ardours". The poet laughs not merely at a fashionable lady's desire to receive love-letters
but also at the conventional vocabulary of those love-letters.
He satirized the judges and the system of courts of 18th century. He says that at 4
O’clock in the afternoon the judges hurriedly sign the sentences and rush to their homes
for dinner in time. This was their sense of responsibility and punctuality. Pope says,
“Mean while declining from the Noon of Day,
The Sun obliquely shoots his burning Ray;
The hungry Judges soon the Sentence sign,
And Wretches hang that Jury-men may Dine;”
[The Rape of the Lock: III. 310-314]
The satire in The Rape of the Lock on aristocratic manners is a commentary on polite
society in general, and on fashionable women in particular. It ridicules the laziness,
idleness, frivolities, vanities, follies, shams, shallowness, superficiality, prudery,
hypocrisy, false ideas of honour, and excessive interest in self-embellishment of the
aristocratic ladies of the eighteenth century.
In book one; Gulliver observes that the Emperor of Lilliput chooses his ministers not on
the basis of their ability to govern but on their ability to walk on a tightrope. This is
Swift's criticism of how George I, the King of England, chooses his ministers--in this
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case, not on their ability to walk a tightrope but on their connections within the court. In
another instance, Swift, through Gulliver, criticizes the religious animosity within
English society by telling us about the hatred between those Lilliputians who open their
eggs from the small end or the large end first.
The two political parties being differentiated by the height of their heels points out how
little substantive difference there was between Whig and Tory.
Gulliver explains that, “there have been two struggling parties in this Empire,
under the names of Tramecksan and Slamecksan, from the high and law heels on
their shoes, by which they distinguish themselves.” [Gulliver's Travels: I. iv. p-
33]
The methods of selecting people for public office in Lilliput are very different from that
of any other nation. In order to be chosen, a man must "rope dance" to the best of his
abilities; the best rope dancer receives the higher office.
Gulliver is surprised “when a great office is vacant either by death or disgrace
(which often happens) five or six of those candidates petition the Emperor to
entertain his Majesty and the Court with a dance on the rope, and whoever jumps
the highest without falling, succeeds in the office. ………….Flimnap, the
Treasurer, is allowed to cut a caper on the straight rope, at least an inch higher
than any other lord in the whole empire.” [Gulliver's Travels: I. iii. p-23]
Here Swift satirizes such an absurd practice of selecting officers in Europe.
In Gulliver’s second voyage, he finds himself in a strange land, where everything around
him many times the normal size. When he encounters the first natives, he fears for his
life, "for as human creatures are observed to be more savage and cruel in proportion to
their bulk" [Gulliver's Travels: II. i. p-73]. While in Lilliput Gulliver had been treated
with respect, largely due to his size; here in this land of giants, Brobdingnag, he is treated
as a curiosity.
Gulliver tells us: “I would hide the frailties and deformities of my political
mother, and place her virtues and beauties in the most advantageous light. This
was my sincere endeavor in those many discourses I had with that mighty
monarch, although it unfortunately failed of success.” [Gulliver's Travels: II.vii.
p-119].
In contrast, Brobdingnagian society has many things to recommend it such as
excellence "in morality, history, poetry, and mathematics," although Gulliver ironically
laments that these are only applied to the practical aspects of life and not used for
abstractions.
The main focus of social criticism in the voyage to Laputa is on intellectuals,
such as scholars, philosophers, and scientists, who often get lost in theoretical
abstractions and conceptions to the exclusion of the more pragmatic aspects of life, in
direct contrast to the practical Brobdingnagians.
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In the floating island Laputa, Gulliver discovers a race of people who are so detached
from reality that they require their servants to carry inflated bladders and hit them in
order to remind them bring them back from highly speculative thought to real-world
concerns. Swift is satirizing the over-abundance of genuine "projectors" in England who
were constantly coming up with outlandish and unworkable ways to cure society's
problems. The Laputians excel at theoretical mathematics, but they can't build houses
where the walls are straight and the corners are square. The satire in Voyage three attacks
both the deficiency of common sense and the consequences of corrupt judgment.
Most obviously, in Laputa, Swift satirizes the power relations of Britain and Swift's
native Ireland or, more broadly, the rich and poor. We find that Laputa is used to subdue
Balnibarbi by threats to block the sun or rain, by throwing down rocks onto them.
When Gulliver lands in the land of the Houyhnhnms, he discovers a race of horses which
are perfectly rational, unemotional, logical beings, and the uncivilized brutes of this
society, the Yahoos, are human beings. Swift is satirizing anyone who chooses a
philosophy over reality.
It is during Gulliver's fourth journey that Swift's satire reaches its pinnacle, where "Swift
put his most biting, hard lines that speak against not only the government, but human
nature itself" (Glicksman). With great irony, Swift brings Gulliver into contact with a
Yahoo once again.
"My horror and astonishment are not to be described, when I observed, in this
abominable animal, a perfect human figure;" [Gulliver's Travels: IV. ii. p-218].
Voyage four contains Swift's clearest attack on human pride. As such, the satire
directed against the pretensions of court, political corruption, and the excesses of
speculative reasoning.
Exaggeration is another literary technique Swift uses throughout the text that categorizes
it as satirical. This is apparent as Houyhnhnms represent the extremes of reason. In
Politics vs. Literature: An Examination of Gulliver’s Travels, George Orwell describes
“Houyhnhnms are exempt from love, friendship, curiosity, fear, sorrow and — except in
their feelings towards the Yahoos, who occupy rather the same place in their community
as the Jews in Nazi Germany — anger and hatred.” (Orwell, p. 333).
Gulliver’s depiction of lawyers is scathing in tone and a very one-sided in its explanation:
“I said there was a Society of Men among us, bred up from the Youth in the Art of
proving by Words multiplied for the Purpose that White is Black, and Black is White,
according as they are paid”. This is an example of oversimplification, which Swift uses to
portray a negative view of Lawyers.
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An important technique Swift employs to further the satirical message of the novel is the
role of the narrator, Gulliver. The gradual change in Gulliver’s character provokes the
reader to question the narrator’s reliability. For the first time, the reader is able to view
Gulliver as a permeable character; he is affected and consequently changed by the
knowledge he garners on this Land. The more he learns from the Houyhnhnm’s society,
the more his misanthrope intensifies.
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other hand, Pope has satirized frivolities of the women. Critics find too much
harshness in Pope's satire on feminine frivolity.
7. While Swift focused more on English and Irish politics, Pope divulged into the
everyday lives of the upper class. The two authors creatively placed sections of their
thoughts and ideas, in the text, that were more serious and rational. The majority of
the two texts are expertly shrouded in satirical humor and drama to make their
points but Swift and Pope were creative in putting straightforward views within the
text.
8. Gulliver’s Travels is alternately described as an attack on humanity and a clear-eyed
assessment of human strengths and weaknesses. It is a complex study of human
nature. Pope has the similar goal to oust the complexion of high society England,
but he focuses on the superficial lifestyle rather than politics.
9. Both Pope and Swift use satire and fantastical places to set their stories
overindulgence, criticizing the society in which they lived. Swift, however, took it
much farther than Pope.
4. CONCLUSION
As can be seen from the myriad works of both the master satirists discussed above, it can
be said that both Pope and Swift were major proponents of satire. Though they employed
different types of satire, they used satire as a form of complaint and defense against a
society that was uncompromising but fickle in its attitude. The Rape of the Lock is a real
picture of the condition of the age. The satire in The Rape of the Lock is not a satire on
the whole contemporary society but a particular class of the society. The four books of
the Travels are presented in a parallel way so that voyages I and II focus on criticism of
various aspects of English society at the time, and man within this society, while voyages
III and IV are more preoccupied with human nature itself. After the first voyage, his
image of humanity is little changed, likewise for the second, although after this point,
Gulliver's image steadily declines until the fourth voyage, when he meets the Yahoos. In
this way, Swift presents his commentary on the human condition through Gulliver's
Travels.
REFERENCES
“Swift, Jonathan (1667-1745).” DISCovering Authors. Online ed. Detroit:
Gale,2003.<http://www.gale.cengage.com/servlet/ItemDetailServlet?region=7&i
mprint=000&titleCode=GAL70&type=4&id=174769>.
Applebee, Arthur N., Ed. The Language of Literature: British Literature. Evanston, IL:
McDougal Littell, 1997
Baines, Paul. The Complete Critical Guide to Alexander Pope. New York: Routledge;
2001. Print.
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