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A Modest Proposal was a satirical essay written by Jonathan Swift depicting
the horrific conditions of Ireland and the lives of the Irish people in 1729.
The author portrays and attacks the cruel and unjust oppression of Ireland by
its oppressor, the mighty English and ridicules the Irish people at the same
time. However, Swift's opposition is indirectly presented. Jonathan Swift is
able to do so by using the persona, irony, and wit in order to expose the
remarkable corruption and degradation of the Irish people, and at the same time
present them with practicable solutions to their unscrupulous and pathetic
lives. The author uses a satire to accomplish his objective not only because he
is able to conceal his true identity but also because it is the most effective
way to awake the people of Ireland into seeing their own depravity. Swift
creates a fictional persona because by hiding his true identity he is able to
convince the readers of the significance of Ireland's problem and allow them to
see truth and reality. The persona is a concerned Irishman who is very
intelligent, sound, and serious. He appears to be a brute and a monster for
proposing something evil and immoral very calmly as if it is normal to consume
the flesh of another human being. What makes his proposal to be even more
depraved is that he proposes to eat the babies. The persona declares, and at
exactly at one year old that I propose to provide for them, in a such a manner
as, instead of being a charge upon their parents, or the parish, or wanting food
and raiment for the rest of their lives, they shall, on the contrary, contribute
to the feeding and partly to the clothing of many thousands. The persona
justifies his proposal with numerous reasons. Besides the prevention of
voluntary abortions and infanticide, it will also prevent the loss of money for
maintenance of children and the abuse of women and children.
The number of
Papists would be reduced and the children will not become beggars, thieves, or
prostitutes. The proposal will aid in the increase in the status of the
peasantry, promote love, and care from the mothers towards their children.
However the persona alone is inadequate to make the narrator seem too plausible.
The persona must utilize irony and wit in order for his essay to be more
efficacious. A Modest Proposal is so effective and appealing because of the
authors' copious uses of irony throughout his essay. The title itself is
definitely ironic. It provides the reader with false expectations of decency and
sensibility on the part of the writer. The butchery of innocent babies and the
use of their skin for clothing is way beyond being modest. It is brutal and
insane. The proposal is intended to shock and throw the reader off balance. The
narrator also ridicules the Irish. His proposal would be a great incentive for
marriage, not because the Irish will marry for the expected reasons, of love and
happiness. Instead they will marry for money. As the persona pronounces, this
would be a great inducement to marriage, which all wise nations have either
encouraged by rewards or enforced by laws and penalties. Moreover, this proposal
if put into effect would aid in establishing love and care in families, between
spouses and towards the children. The mother would provide her babies with
better nourishment. Since, plump, fat, and juicy babies are worth more than the
lean and abused ones. The husbands will become fond of their wives and refrain
from abusing them, to avoid a possible miscarriage. Furthermore, normally the
child is introduced to Christianity to celebrate his or her birth and
introduction to Christianity. However, ironically Christenings will celebrate a
baby's impending death. The baby must be murdered in order for the parents to
profit.
Thus, the primary motive of the Irish is money. The persona's ingenious
display of irony serves a purpose for attacking, scorning, and exposing the
vices of the Irish people. The narrator's brilliant and clever use of wit is
definitely noteworthy throughout A Modest Proposal. In order to make cannibalism
sound like the most practicable solution, the author wisely uses his wit. He is
implying that cannibalism cannot possibly be more barbaric and unethical than
what the Irish are already doing to themselves. Swift is reproaching the Irish
for their indolence and pride. The people of Ireland are being reviled and
scorned for their lack of action in order to mitigate the current circumstances.
The narrator proclaims, for we can neither employ them in handicraft or
agriculture; we neither build houses, nor cultivate land. The responsibility of
being oppressed is blamed on the Irish more than on the oppressors, the English.
Incredibly, the narrator is able to enthrall the readers' attention through his
accurate use of sarcasm and mockery. What makes the persona so credible is the
precise and skillful use of diction and wit. The author characterizes the
mothers as breeders, swine, and cattle. The children are described as numbers,
statistics, and debased to mathematical computations. The author does so
shrewdly, because statistics are facts and the truth in peoples' minds. The
narrator writes, the number of souls in Ireland being usually reckoned one
million and a half. Then further goes on, the question is how this number shall
be reared, and provided for. People are living like animals and are dehumanized.
The persona is also plausible because he appears to have everything planned and
well researched. He even goes into specific details.
The narrator's states, a
young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious, nourishing
and wholesome food, whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled, and I make no
doubt that it will serve in a fricassee, or a ragout. The brilliance in the use
of witticism and sarcasm by the persona play a critical role in awakening the
Irish to the physical existence of their debauched environment. By convincing
the people of Ireland to reform, Jonathan Swift proved his satire A Modest
Proposal to be an effective means for accomplishing his intent. The people of
Ireland went through a stage of awakening due to Swifts' scintillating portrayal
of their corrupted, exploited, and dehumanized lives. The satire gave the Irish
a better scope on the reality. They were able to see the severity of their
crisis and that they were complicit on their oppression. Jonathan Swift
fabricated a fictional character in order to persuade the readers to approach
his essay and his proposal with endmost seriousness. However once Swift took off
his mask, the readers finally realized that they were being derided and scolded.
Once Swift took off his mask he stopped his criticism and presented the Irish
with applicable solutions. All he wants the Irish people to do is tax their
absentees, purchase only Irish goods, become more wise and thrifty with money,
and be less haughty, futile, and indolent. Also, Swift asked the landlords to be
more lenient on their people. Furthermore, Swift impelled and inspired the Irish
into rebelling by presenting them with feasible solutions to cease the anguish
of Ireland's people.
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