SWIFT: Gulliver’s Travels I (A Voyage to Lilliput)
What
makes a human being human? Normally this
is a question for philosophers and biologists.
But in this case Jonathan Swift uses literature to highlight qualities,
both good and bad, that make us human.
He has high hopes for the human race, and high standards too. Gulliver (Swift) expresses his
disillusionment in a letter to his cousin Sympson: “I cannot learn that my Book
hath produced one single Effect according to mine Intentions…” And what were those intentions? “When Party and Faction are extinguished;
Judges learned and upright… young Nobility’s Education entirely changed;
Physicians banished; Females abound in Virtue… when Wit, Merit and Learning are
rewarded…” Alas, the human race falls
far short of Swift’s expectations. He
points out our human follies and shows us the path to human virtue through the
travels of Lemuel Gulliver. The book is
part travelogue, part adventure story, part philosophical musing. It’s a clever literary device but how is
Swift able to convert a travelogue into a meditation on human nature? As a young man Gulliver became a doctor but says
when “my business began to fail” he “determined to go again to Sea.” Being a doctor on a ship gave Gulliver lots
of free time and he says “My hours of leisure I spent reading the best Authors,
ancient and modern; being always provided with a good Number of Books.” So far, so good. Studying, reading and writing books, building
ships and going to sea are all human activities. The trouble begins when Gulliver’s ship sinks
in a storm and he’s washed up ashore in an unknown land. When he regains consciousness he feels
something moving across his chest and he “perceived it to be a human Creature
not six inches high, with a Bow and Arrow in his Hands, and a Quiver at his
Back.” Here’s a question. Can a “Creature not six inches high” be
human? Gulliver thought so. Why?
The “Creature” looked human. And
besides, creatures such as bugs and birds and chipmunks don’t have bows and
arrows and quivers on their backs. This
particular creature looks human but happens to only be six inches tall. As creatures go, that’s more the size of a
bug or a bird or a chipmunk than the size of a human being. How tall does someone have to be in order to
be human? Gulliver determines even at
six inches this creature is human. What
if the creature was just one inch, or microscopic? Is there a downward limit to the size of
humans? Let’s
turn Swift’s proposition around and look at it from the other end. Gulliver was over 10 times the size as these
Lilliputians. How would we feel if we
encountered creatures who were 50 or 60 feet tall? Probably much as the Lilliputians felt when
they said “whether there are other Kingdoms and States in the World, inhabited
by human Creatures as large as your self, our Philosophers are in much Doubt;
and would rather conjecture that you dropt from the Moon…”
Gulliver
did not, in fact, drop from the moon.
But according to Lilliputian experience they had never encountered a
creature like Gulliver before, so dropping from the moon is as good an
explanation as any. From our
perspective, no one has ever seen a 50 or 60 foot tall creatures except in
science fiction movies. If we did
encounter a creature so big and so powerful, how should we respond? We could turn to science fiction movies to
get a popular answer. The classic case
would be “King Kong” (1933). In “The Day
the Earth Stood Still” (1951) the earth was invaded by a powerful force. In both cases earthlings acted aggressively
to defend ourselves against hostile forces.
In the movie “Independence Day” (1996) the earth was also invaded by
powerful forces. This time we tried the
opposite approach. Earthlings celebrated
and held peace parties on the tops of tall buildings. Then they got unceremoniously obliterated by
alien creatures who had come to scavenge the earth and then move on to their
next conquest. So much for peaceful
intentions. Humans, like Lilliputians,
would probably be very cautious if confronted with a strong alien force. And we would be right to do so. In that sense, Swift was way ahead of his
time and gives us a preview of his next meditation, Gulliver’s “Voyage to
Brobdingnag.”