Gulliver's Travels
|
|
| St. John, Henry | Viscount Bolingbroke; 1678-1751; English secretary of state for foreign affairs (1710-15); with Robert Harley (Lord
Oxford), St. John lead the Tory government at the end of the reign of Queen Anne and helped bring about the Treaty of Utrecht ending the war with France. Jonathan Swift was enlisted as a propagandist to win support for the Tory position and undermine the popular opposition, in close collaboration with Bolingbroke. A rift between Oxford and Bolingbroke weakened the Tory position. Fearing a reversal with the death of the ailing Queen Anne, Bolingbroke and other Tory leaders opened negotiations with the exiled James II in France. At the death of Queen Anne and the ascension of George I, the Tories were swept out and the leaders, including Bolingbroke, were impeached for treason. Bolingbroke fled to France rather than face trial and prison. Gulliver's experience in Lilliput is a retelling of Bolingbroke's story, particularly the impeachment for putting out the palace fire (the Treaty) and his flight to Blefuscu (France). Bolingbroke later returned to England and took up writing philosophy. His rational positivism, reflected in his correspondence with Swift, may have inspired the Houyhnhnm philosophy described in Part IV.
Further reading:
|
| satire | the use of humor to expose folly, failings, and absurdities; or, inversely, a type of criticism which uses humor to make its point; thus satire is necessarily directed against failings, especially those presented as reasonable propositions; satire is often directed against those in power or positions of authority;
satire usually uses indirect forms of humor, such as irony, exaggeration, and parody, to make its points; problems are addressed obliquely; for example, praising that which deserves condemnation (Gulliver's praise of gunpowder in Brobdingnag II:7;3) or taking a bad or weak idea to its absurd conclusion (A Modest Proposal); one of the limitations of satire is that its targets may not recognize themselves; "SATIRE is a sort of glass wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own; which is the chief reason for that kind reception it meets with in the world, and that so very few are offended with it." Author's Preface, The Battle Of The Booksmore often readers may not get the joke and mistake the point; "A Bishop here said, that Book was full of improbable lies, and for his part he hardly believed a word of it; and so much for Gulliver." letter to Alexander Pope, Nov. [27] 1726Swift often wrote in the satiric mode, just as often writing in the first-person of a character created to carry the burden of the satire; thus when he wanted to deflate astrologer John Partridge, he published his own predictions under the name Isaac Bickerstaff; similarly when he needed a narrator for his Travels, he created Lemuel Gulliver, a sea-going physician, who could report his observations of the "Remote Nations of the World." In the Travels, the targets of Swift's satire include virtually every aspect of human experience, from contemporary controversies to ancient history, to the practice of government, religion, law, medicine, and scientific research, and to the fundamentals of life, birth, family, education, love, friendship, marriage, sex, and death, even human nature. Because of the breadth of the satire, there is something there to delight, anger, and bewilder everyone, contributing to its continued popularity for almost 300 years. Swift's satire is pointed, sometimes harsh, always funny, and rarely simple or direct. That is in part the nature of satire, that it exposes absurdities, but it does not necessarily provide remedies. |
| say the thing that was not | to lie; var: say the thing which was not; this phrase is the Houyhnhnms' best attempt at describing the concept of lying, since "... they have no Word in their Language to express Lying or Falsehood." (IV:3;4) Though the term is introduced in the narrative in Part IV, Gulliver uses it in the prepended "A Letter, from Capt. Gulliver, to his Cousin Sympson" (Letter;1) |
| Scalcath | see Relplum Scalcath |
| Martinus Scriberlus Club | literary circle formed in 1713 centering around Swift, Alexander Pope, John Gay, Thomas Parnell and John Arbuthnot "to ridicule pretentious erudition and scholarly jargon" through the fictious author Martinus Scriberlus. Other members included the Earl of Oxford and Viscount Bolingbroke. The group broke up when the Tory government fell in 1714 and many of the members were scattered in the aftermath. Some of the ideas which appeared in Gulliver's Travels may have had their origin in the schemes of group, though there are questions about how much was in hand before and how much was concocted after Swift's work was published. For further information, see |
| Scymiter | scimitar; a curved sword with a cutting edge
|
| sensible | aware or understanding; "You are very sensible that Skyresh Bolgolam (Galbet, or High Admiral) has been your mortal Enemy almost ever since your Arrival: (I:7;5) means "You are already aware..." |
| sex |
|
| Shnuwnh | misprint in Motte edition; see Lhnuwnh |
| Skyresh Bolgolam | see Bolgolam Skyresh |
| Slamecksan | Lilliput: one of two parties which, with the Tramecksans, vie for political power within Lilliput. Slamecksans represent England's Whig party, then favored by George I. The Whig alignment with the Low Church is represented by their low heels; "low-set man" or lose-it man" [Clark]
for above seventy Moons past there have been two struggling Parties in this Empire, under the Names of Tramecksan and Slamecksan (I:4) |
| Slardral | Brobd.; "a Gentleman Usher" (II:3;1); "slanderer" [Clark] |
| Slumskudask | Lugg.; "only desired I would give them Slumskudask, or a Token of Remembrance, which is a modest way of begging(III:10;18); Clark translates as "could ask smears" or "slums" or "slurs" |
| Smithfield | area outside of the City of London once used for executions. |
| Snilpall | Lill.Legal; "far smear" [Clark]; title bestowed on a citizen who "can there bring sufficient Proof that he has strictly observed the Laws of his Country for seventy-three Moons" (I:6;6) |
| South Sea | Pacific Ocean |
| South Sea Bubble | a financial disaster caused when the South Sea Company's shares rose many times over the company's value and then crashed. more info |
| War of the Spanish Succession | (1701-1714); conflict between the Grand Alliance of the Hague (England, the Holy Roman Empire, and the United Provinces) against France and Spain obstensibly over the throne of Spain; ended by the Treaty of Utrecht, engineered in England by the Tory government. |
| spectacles | Gulliver keeps back his eye glasses with several other items when he is searched by the Lilliputians. These come in handy later when he seizes the Blefuscan navy.
|
| splacknuck | Brobd.; apparently some form of animal, to which Gulliver is compared in size; Clark translates as "spaniel" as in a toy dog in fashion at the time; however, at one inch to one foot scale, Gulliver would have been smaller than the smallest dog (remember his fear of the cat) and this seems an unlikely solution.
|
| Splendide Mendax | 'liar for the public good'; legend which appears below the portrait of Gulliver in some editions; see example |
| Sprug | Lill. "their greatest Gold Coin, about the bigness of a Spangle"; "spangle" [Clark] |
| Steele, Richard | (1672-1729); essayist; published the Tatler and, with Joseph Addison, the Spectator; member of Parliament briefly until expelled for publishing an unpopular pamphlet |
| "Stella" | pet and literary name Swift gave to Esther Johnson |
| stang | quarter of an acre |
| strand | "The shore, especially the beach of a sea, ocean, or large lake;" Webster's Unabridged Dictionary |
| streights | straits; difficult situation; "he shewed to what streights his Majesty's Revenue was reduced by the Charge of maintaining you" (I:7;16) |
| Struldbruggs | Lugg.; race of immortals unique to the island of Luggnagg whose account comprises III:10 ; Clark translates as "stir dull blood" or "stirred blood" or "sterile blood"; |
| summerset | sommersault; acrobatic manuever |
| Surat | city on the west coast of India, a major English trading settlement (or "factory"); in his second adventure, Gulliver joins the crew of "the Adventure, a Merchant-Ship of three hundred tons, bound for Surat." (I:8;11) |
| Swallow | ship under the command of Capt. Abraham Pannell; Gulliver's first voyages as ship's surgeon; no unusual experiences described. |
| Deane Swift | 1707-1783; Jonathan Swift's younger cousin, once estanged from his distinguished relation, became his guardian during his last years and his defender after his death; |
Jonathan Swift
|
1667 - 1745; satirist, poet, political pamphleteer, priest; author of The Tale of a Tub , The Battle of the Books, The Drapier's Letters, Gulliver's Travels, and A Modest Proposal, numerous poems and essays.
Swift was born in Dublin, Ireland, November 20, 1667 to Jonathan and Abigail Erick (or Herrick) Swift, English immigrants. He was their second child and only son. Swift's father passed away earlier that year and, though there is some confusion about the details, his mother left her young son to be raised by her late husband's family and returned to England. Swift was sent to Kilkenny Grammar School and then to Dublin University (Trinity) where he received a B.A. (1686). Swift was studying for his Masters when political troubles surrounding the overthrow of James II (the Glorious Revolution) caused him to leave for England (1688). In England, Swift's mother helped find him a position as secretary to Sir Wm. Temple, a retired statesman and family friend, at his estate at Moor Park (1689). It was here that Swift met his lifelong friend, Esther Johnson ("Stella" of many of his poems and letters), a member of Temple's household, then 8 years old. Swift left Temple in 1690 for Ireland because of his health, but returned to Temple's service the following year. During this second stay with Temple, Swift received his M.A. from Oxford (1692). Apparently dispairing of a gaining a better position from Temple, Swift left Moor Park to be ordained a priest in the Church of Ireland and was appointed to a prebend in Kilroot (1694). Though Swift seems to have found some comfort in developing the gardens and ground around his house, he was otherwise miserable being isolated in a small, remote community. While there, however, Swift seems to have became romantically involved with Jane Waring. A letter from him survives offering to remain if she would marry him and promising to leave and never return to Ireland if she refused. She must have refused, because Swift left his post and returned to England and Temple's service at Moor Park in 1696 where he remained until Temple's death in 1699. At Temple's death, Swift was left without a patron. He felt that he had been promised a "living" through his connection to Temple and tried to appeal directly to King William for appointment to a position, but without success. Instead, he returned to Ireland as chaplain to Lord Berkeley, a new lord justice. Apparently, Swift expected to be secretary and chaplain, and when someone else edged Swift out of the first position, he left Berkeley to be appointed to the vicarages of Laracor and Rathbeggan, the rectory of Agher, and the prebend Dunlavin, St. Patrick's Cathedral. In 1701, Swift received his Doctor of Divinity from Dublin University. In 1702, Esther Johnson and her companion Rebecca Dingley moved to Ireland at Swift's urging, obstensibly to take advantage of the lower cost of living there. Swift returned to London several times over the next 10 years, eventually in an official capacity to lobby the government on the Church of Ireland's behalf (1707-9). During this time Swift published A Tale of a Tub and Battle of the Books (1704) and began to gain a reputation as a writer. This lead to close, lifelong friendships with Alexander Pope, John Gay and John Arbuthnot, forming the core of the Martinus Scriberlus Club). Beginning 1710, Swift was recruited to support the Tory government under Robert Harley and Henry St. John at the end of Queen Anne's reign. His letters to Johnson and Dingley back in Ireland (published as "A Journal to Stella") record those turbulent times leading up to the fall of the Tories in 1714. The subsequent proscecution of the Tory leaders, Swift's friends, is one of the subjects addressed in Gulliver's Travels. Again Swift hoped that his contacts would lead to a position of importance, perhaps the Historiographer Royal or a bishopric. His friends in government, however met with resistance from Queen Anne who had apparently formed a dislike for Swift, and the best they could do for him was appointment as Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin (1713). Thus at the fall of the Tory government, Swift returned to Ireland, almost as an exile ("like a rat in a hole"). However, once in Ireland, Swift began to turn his pamphleteering skills in support of Irish causes, producing some of his most memorable works; "Proposal for Universal Use of Irish Manufacture" (1720), "The Drapier's Letters" (1724), and "A Modest Proposal" (1728); earning him the status of an Irish patriot. Also during this time, Swift wrote Gulliver's Travels (1726). Like all of his other work, Swift published the Travels pseudonomously. Several of his publications had resulted in a price placed on his head and there was enough critical material against the current English government and monarchy to bring charges of sedition. The Travels was the culmination of all his experience, understanding, and talent, addressing his views of the world and humanity as a whole. It is his masterpiece and remains one of the great literary works, and perhaps the greatest satiric work, of all time. Though Swift was in other respects a healthy man (he was a great advocate of exercise, a vigorous walker and horseback rider), he suffered from bouts of "giddiness" or vertigo and ringing in his ears from his early 20s, caused by Meniere's Disease, an inner ear condition. Swift's letters are full of the misery it caused him and it also contributed to Swift's fear of losing his mind. These fears seemed to be coming true when, in his 70s Swift appeared increasingly disoriented and vulnerable. His friends had him declared of "unsound mind and memory" (1742) and his affairs placed in the hands of trustees to protect him. Though medical evidence is sketchy, it seems that he then suffered a series strokes or seizures which deprived him of speech. Swift died on October 19, 1745 just short of his 78th birthday. His epitaph reads: Cor Lacerare Nequit Abi Viator Et Imitare Si Poteris Strenuum Pro Virili Libertatis Vindicatorem [He has gone where fierce indignation can lacerate his heart no more -- depart wayfarer, and imitate if you are able one who to the utmost strenously championed liberty.] |
| Sympson, Richard | fictional "publisher" of Gulliver's Travels and therefore the writer of the preface ("The Publisher To The Reader") and the target of Gulliver's criticism ("A Letter from Capt. Gulliver, to his Cousin Sympson"). In his preface, Sympson claims to be Gulliver's "antient and intimate Friend" (Publisher;1) as well as a relation. Gulliver's "Letter" is addressed "to his Cousin Sympson."
It was in the name of Richard Sympson, on behalf of the fictional Gulliver, that Swift negotiated publication of the Travels with the printer Benj. Motte. While Swift had other dealings as Swift with Motte in his own name, he continued to correspond as Sympson regarding the Travels. (see letters) |