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The fanciful and morbid character of the writing here is suggested by the fact that in
the first two voyages Gulliver visits lands inhabited by pigmies only six inches high and giants
of huge size respectively. Lilliput is a country of dwarfs, while Brobdingnag is a country of
huge, monstrous looking giants. When an author reduces human beings to the size of
pigmies, and treats them as no better than insects, he is giving evidence of neurotic mind.
Similarly when he looks at human beings through a magnifying glass and depicts them as
huge creatures that bear no proportion to actual human beings, he is giving again evidence of
a sick mind. In Brobdingnag, Gulliver is disgusted to see the monstrous breast of a woman
when she is suckling her child. Her breast “Stood prominent six feet, and could not be less
than sixteen in circumference”. The nipples of her breasts were about half the bigness of
Gulliver’s head and they were covered with pimples and freckles so as to look very
nauseating. The sight of a group of group of beggars in in Brobdingnag is equally disgusting to
Gulliver. The sight of lice crawling on their clothes suggests that the author of this book
probably had a neurotic mind.
The Portrayal of the Yahoos also Suggestive of the author’s Neurotic Mind:
The portrayal of the Yahoos in part IV of the book reinforces the impression that the
author had a neurotic mind. The Yahoos are described as filthy, gluttonous beings that arouse
Gulliver’s hatred and disgust at first sight. The more Gulliver goes near them, the more
detestable they appear to him to be during his stay in that country. Gulliver thinks them to be
the most unteachable of all brutes, having the strongest disposition to mischief. They have
stupid desire of collecting stones and licking the feet and posterior of their leaders. The
female Yahoos are very lustful. Gulliver actually begins to think his own countrymen and even
the members of his own family to be no better than the Yahoos. All this indicates that Swift is
expressing his own profound hatred for the human race.
The matter does not end here. Gulliver gives criticizing account of his countrymen’s
life to his equine master. He ridicules lawyers, judges, doctors and ministers of state. Here we
have a sweeping and wholesale indictment of the human race. The lawyers are described by
him as persons who are trained in the art of proving by words that white is black and black is
white, according as they are paid. Doctors are generally incompetent pretenders who hardly
ever cure any disease, real or imaginary. The ministers in the country have only one passion
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of desire for wealth, power and titles. They use their daughters, wives and sisters to gain
positions in the court.
The criticism of the human race contained in the satire in “Gulliver Travels” is
substantially well-found and therefore witty. We have plenty of light-hearted and mirthful
satire. The two groups in Lilliput debating over breaking of the egg from either side represent
the religious sects in England. The ironic portrayal of Flimnap symbolizes the parliamentary
skills of Sir Walpole. The annoyance of the Empress of Lilliput with Gulliver for having
extinguished a fire in her palace by urinating on it was intended by Swift to be a satirical
representation of the resentment of Queen Anne against him for having written “A Tale of
Tub”.
In part III, again, we have some very wholesome satire. The researches that are going
on at the Academy of Projectors suggest the useless work that was being done by the Royal
Society of the time. This part of the satire is evidently a criticism of philosophers, scientists,
academics, planners, intellectuals, in fact, all those people who proceed according to theory
and become useless when it comes to actual practice. The critics who have been
misrepresenting or misinterpreting the works of Homer and Aristotle are also ridiculed.
In the light of the above discussion, it is clear that “Gulliver’s Travels” is not a neurotic
Phantasy. Anybody who has had a real and prolonged experience of human society will not
discard this book as a neurotic Phantasy. As we have noted, there is certainly an element of
morbidity in this book. Towards the close, Gulliver himself certainly becomes neurotic. But
there is no reason to believe that Swift approves of Gulliver’s extreme misanthropy. On the
whole, this book is a realistic portrayal of the human race. Exaggeration there certainly is, but
no satire can be written without exaggeration just as the art of the cartoonist cannot flourish
without exaggeration.
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