Jonathan Swift Rhetorical Analysis

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A walk down the street may lead to a picture of women and children lining the streets. Some of them poor, cold, and hungry. How can that be changed to help society be more successful? Swift’s essay is effective because he is raising awareness to an issue that exists in Ireland. There are too many poor families crowding the streets, so let’s make them useful. As the article goes in to detail Swift discusses such ideas as, selling the children to the rich for food. And in turn, the poor will be better off with fewer mouths to feed. Swift’s article is very satire with the use of irony, humor and exaggeration is used through the article. In the article Swift comments about the “deplorable state of the kingdom” and uses the idea of selling the poor people’s children as a way to make money. Using persuasive appeal as discussed in Effectiveness in Writing (Driver, Helen, Gast, and Lowman-Thomas 60), Aristotle discusses using three ways to appeal to the reader using pathos, ethos and logos. The use of much pathos …show more content…

By using some of the facts based on the population it may be said that this was use of ethos. Swift wants to portray himself as knowledgeable about the issues and by doing so he brings a real awareness to the overcrowding that needs to be dealt with. Also stating in the article that, “I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London, that 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 equally serve in a fricassee or a ragout.” (Swift) may lead one to believe that these conversations for actually occurred. With this being a satire article, again Swift is trying to call attention to an issue that exists in

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