Overpopulation and poverty were problems that plagued Ireland in the early 18th century as a result of English imperialism, wherein absentee English property owners controlled Irish legislature, and found it profitable to maintain a destitute Ireland that could not challenge English power. In order to combat this problem, Jonathan Swift makes “A Modest Proposal” that would offer a solution mitigate Irish starvation while simultaneously limiting the effects of overpopulation, since nothing else seemed effective. Swift argues “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 thus should be raised and sold like cattle to provide food for the Irish, …show more content…
money for poor mothers, and a valuable export for the country of Ireland as a whole. Swift uses pathos, logos, and ethos to make a sound argument, barring the moral depravity necessary to actually carry out such a plan, for why Irish children should be eaten in an attempt to spur both the English and Irish to action to fix the nation’s troubles. In order for this essay to be effective, Swift needed to ensure that he made a strong argument, which he does by establishing that a problem exists using pathos. Swift uses emotions to establish a connection between the readers and the poor. By noting that “It is a melancholy object to those who walk through this great town or travel in the country, when they see the streets, the roads, and cabin doors, crowded with beggars of the female sex, followed by three, four, or six children, all in rags and importuning every passenger for an alms” Swift paints a dismal picture of the state of Ireland in order to draw a strong emotional response from his audience. He goes on to declare, “whoever could find out a fair, cheap, and easy method of making these children sound, useful members of the commonwealth, would deserve so well of the public as to have his statue set up for a preserver of the nation,” further attempting to elicit an emotional reaction from the audience by suggesting that the situation is so bleak that the person who comes up with a solution is a national hero, while implying that he is, in fact, that hero. He then emphasizes the difficulty of the problem, saying that a solution “is utterly impossible by all the methods hitherto proposed.” This emotional build-up leaves the audience begging for the elegant solution that he promises. Next, Swift takes the problems of overpopulation, prevalence of begging mothers, and expense of child rearing to its only logical conclusion – that the children should be eaten. He then proceeds to make a detailed list of logical arguments to support his claim, while downplaying emotional arguments against his solution. First, he notes that his plan would “greatly lessen the number of papists [Catholics]” who were seen as a direct threat to the Protestants in the region. He then states that this will provide a source of income to the poor, taking that burden off of others to provide for them so they do not starve in the street. At the same time, this plan helps to take the financial burden of children from these poor families. He also suggests that this will both provide a source of income for the country, and limit the resources spent to provide for the poor, thus ensuring “the nation's stock will be thereby increased fifty thousand pounds per annum.” He also mentions that among other things, this practice would improve the region’s cuisine, attract the wealthy to enjoy this delicacy, and improve the way pregnant women and children are treated, as healthy babies would bring more money at the market. Given its proposed effectiveness at solving the problems that faced Ireland at the time, along with the amount of evidence he offered to back it up, there may be other plans that don’t involve literally eating the country that would be worth further investigation. Moreover, it should be mentioned that Swift downplays the negative emotional response that a typical reader would experience at the suggestion of consuming a baby by dehumanizing the parents, to whom he consistently refers as “breeders,” rather than mothers or fathers. Additionally, Swift creates a sense of consensus and lends credibility to his arguments using ethos by referring to conversations he’s had with his friends.
First, it is his American friend who suggests that one-year-old children make excellent food. This American friend also relays that older children are too tough to be enjoyed properly. Also, Psalmanazar, another supposed expert on the topic, claims that the bodies of executed criminals are commonly sold to be eaten on his home island of Formosa. This inclusion of input from his friends makes the practice of cannibalism seem more common in other parts of the world, which helps to combat the inherent reluctance to accept his plan that would be ingrained in Irish …show more content…
culture. The strength of Swift’s argument, combined with its absurdity highlight the problem while calling the audience to enact a better solution than eating the offspring of the poor.
Throughout the essay, Swift leaves conspicuous hints of his true intention as he states “I calculate my remedy for this one individual Kingdom of Ireland … let no man talk to me of other expedients: Of taxing our absentees at five shillings a pound: Of using neither cloaths, nor houshold furniture, except what is of our own growth and manufacture ... Lastly, of putting a spirit of honesty, industry, and skill into our shop-keepers …” Here, he gives a long list of other ways to make things better in Ireland, while calling the Irish people to action to solve their own problems. He also bitterly mocks those he feels are responsible for the current plight, stating “I could name a country, which would be glad to eat up our whole nation,” after mentioning his plan’s effects on the English, and claiming that landlords should enjoy the new delicacy since “as they have already devoured most of the parents, seem to have the best title to the children.” Swift gives a slew of simple solutions that even a commoner could help start. Things like supporting the Irish economy by only buying domestic goods, and pressing the shop-keepers to have the integrity that they so often lack in this time period. In writing all these solutions, he almost mocks the public for not taking action, in the hopes that they
will. Together, Swift’s compelling argument for eating the babies of the Irish, combined with its sheer absurdity and his sardonic mockery of both the wealthy and English he blames for starting the problem and the poor Irish he blames for perpetuating it through inaction, serve as a call to action to solve the problems facing Ireland. Swift’s use of rhetorical strategies helped him to persuade people to take action. These actions may have seemed irrational to some, but the underlying motive was to get the message out about the problems in Ireland.
In Swift’s satirical essay he stated the main issue to be the hunger and starvation of Irish country and their lack of money to support oneself. He said the complication was they themselves don’t have food, to many families in poverty, and that the Englishman took their land and charging high prices for rent. Swift makes this argument because he too is an Irish men and he struggles to see his fellow men parish in the streets. He desires his people to stand up against England and take back what’s theirs. He argues that the Irish...
In the time frame that Swifts’ A Modest Proposal was written Ireland was going through political, economic, and religious struggles. In 1729 England had contrived, with the help of Irish venality, to wreck Ireland’s merchant marine, agriculture, and wool industry. Prostitutes in Swift’s paper are having kids like senseless people, but yet they can’t afford to feed them. Jonathan Swift proposes that his people should sell the babies and eat them. He thinks this would help solve the problem of over population. Swift tried to give his people pamphlets on how to fix the problem that was plaguing their country, but they ignored them. Swift says “These mothers, instead of being able to work for their honest livelihood, are forced to employ all their time in strolling to beg sustenance for their helpless infants.”(1) Swift proposes that the mothers sell the babies for 8 shillings; the rich would find the child to be a delicacy and the extra money would go to the landlord. So everyone would benefit from this proposal. He does this as a way of making his people aware of what is going on in their
With all of these problems, the parents couldn’t maintain their children, so they needed a solution. Now this incredible man comes with a solution that is going to blow your mind, Swift decides to give them a proposal. It was a really uncommon one, but very helpful for them. This proposal is going to stabilize once again the country of Ireland. He established the use of the children of the poor as a source of food.
In 1729, Jonathan Swift published a pamphlet called “A Modest Proposal”. It is a satirical piece that described a radical and humorous proposal to a very serious problem. The problem Swift was attacking was the poverty and state of destitution that Ireland was in at the time. Swift wanted to bring attention to the seriousness of the problem and does so by satirically proposing to eat the babies of poor families in order to rid Ireland of poverty. Clearly, this proposal is not to be taken seriously, but merely to prompt others to work to better the state of the nation. Swift hoped to reach not only the people of Ireland who he was calling to action, but the British, who were oppressing the poor. He writes with contempt for those who are oppressing the Irish and also dissatisfaction with the people in Ireland themselves to be oppressed.
Through extreme hyperboles, Swift underscores the gargantuan social issues afflicting Ireland in the 1720s. While proposing a plan to solve all of Ireland’s problems, Swift explains that “a young healthy child well nursed is… a most delicious nourishing and wholesome food, whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled” (Swift 59-60). Swift exaggerates all of the effects of his plan, especially the supposedly tasty “boiled” child. Rather than simply stating that eating children would solve all of Ireland's problems, Swift goes on to list the many ways these dishes would be prepared. Even
In eighteenth century Ireland, the nation was in a famine and an epidemic of poverty due to the high prices of land and food. Jonathan Swift saw a problem, so h wrote and spread what we call today, A Modest Proposal. Swift’s essay is satirical. He exaggerates and gives inaccurate statistics to deliver a thesis that runs deeper than the explicit one about eating babies. While much of the essay seems to imply that Swift’s persona eats babies, there are some instances where Jonathan hints at the ironic themes of the writing.
It is a great contradiction and absurdity that a husband and father proposes the idea of cannibalism. The narrator does not want the reader to agree that the solution to overpopulation and poverty in Ireland is to eat babies; he wants the reader to see it. needs to be a practical solution. Although something seems one way to the narrator, Jonathan Swift wants. the reader to see it in the opposite light.
In “A Modest Proposal”, Swift does not blame everything on the people of Ireland. In fact, he says that the people, politicians, and English were all at fault for the horrendous state the country faced. One annoyance Swift states is that the poor infants, if they survive their childhood years, would “leave their dear native country to fight for the Pretender in Spain” or “they would sell themselves to the Barbados,” as indentured servants (Swift). He suggests that the lack of nationalism and pride in their country has led citizens to just leave instead of trying to fix the problem leading to the country 's
During the 1720’s, the Irish people were suffering dearly, due to the oppression by Great Britain. There oppression came in the form of being displaced by wealthy English people who were buying up land in Ireland and then not living there. They would proceed to rent some of their land to the Irish people at extremely high rent, which eventually led to them not being able to pay neither their rent or provide their families with food or clothes. The reason behind Swift’s proposal is simple. He is an Irishman. He has a sense of patriotic duty to attempt to help his fellow Irish people. He wants them to know that it is possible to move forward form poverty and out from under the oppression of the British. He structures his essay through a basic form of presenting an idea and then backing it up with “facts” like the growth in weight of babies or expert accounts on the taste of children from a credible source. Something that Swift just assumes that the audience will take for granted. Additionally he assumes that the audience won’t simply put his article down, taking it as the ramblings of a mad man talking about eating babies like it’s a normal everyday thing.
Jonathan Swift says that the people, politicians, and English are all at fault for the terrible state and poverty of Ireland. Swift states that if a poor infant passes the dangerous years of childhood, they would “leave their dear native country to fight for the Pretender in Spain” or “they would sell themselves to the Barbados,” as indentured servants.
Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal is a shocking satire that discusses the dire poverty in Ireland. It says if one is born poor they will stay that way unless society puts them to use. Children are food to be eaten. In an economic slump children will be used to feed and clothe Ireland’s population. Swift’s purpose for writing A Modest Proposal was to call attention to the exploiting and oppressing by the English to the Irish. He wanted to shock his readers by proposing his “modest” proposal. He presents selling babies as food to reduce overpopulation. This causes the reader to disregard this suggestion. Swift wanted to raise awareness on the issue that was haunting Ireland. Throughout A Modest Proposal, Swift effectively uses verbal irony, diction, and sentence structure to achieve his purpose of making people realize that there are problems in society that needed to be handled in a reasonable manner. He also wanted to help advance the country’s trade, provide for infants, relieve the poor and help the rich. Swift ultimately wanted to get people thinking about actual solutions that could solve their current problems.
An Oxford University graduate, Jonathan Swift, in his article, A Modest Proposal, proposes a solution to Irelands growing poverty in the 18th century by proposing the selling and eating of innocent babies. Swift’s purpose is to state the benefits that the poor would gain from selling their one year old children to the wealthy to eat them. He takes on a concerning tone in order to convince the people of Ireland to consider and adopts his obscene plan.
In this message by Jonathan Swift, he comes up with a brilliant idea to boost the economy and eliminate the burden of feeding hungry mouths of the poor Irish folk’s children, by selling and cooking their children like live stock. The author presents the argument with a simple, easy and cost efficient solution to the underlying problem. Swift ultimately presents that eating the Irish’s babies would solve the poor catholic Irish parent’s problem and would also be beneficial to the public as well. The author also collected data about how many children could to be sold by their weight and price, and the projected consumption patterns. ----Add more!!maybe?
The idea of eating all the youth in the country is obviously self-defeating and is not being seriously suggested by the writer. He is simply trying to show how desperate the lower class is in Ireland. Swift introduces the reforms he is actually suggesting, taxing absentee landlords, of encouraging the domestic economy by buying Irish goods, of discouraging pride, vanity, idleness, by dismissing them in his essay by saying that they are impractical. However, these reforms greatly differ from his ?modest proposal? because instead of the poor sacrificing their children, it would involve the rich sacrificing some of their luxuries. He is trying to point out the fact that reforms that would be practical and beneficial to the people of Ireland are being overlooked for the convenience of the rich.
Jonathan Swift, a well-known author, in his essay “A Modest Proposal,” implies that the Irish people should eat children so that they can better their chances of survival. Swift supports his implication by describing how his proposal will have many advantages such as, eliminating papists, bringing great custom to taverns, and inducing marriages. He comes up with an absurd proposal to eat and sell the children to the elite so the Irish can have a brighter future. His purpose is to show that the Irish deserve better treatment from the English. Throughout his essay, Swift uses sarcasm, satire, and irony.