Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels is more than an adventure story; it is a sharp, satirical critique of human nature, politics, and society. Swift uses Gulliver’s changing perspectives, from mighty giant to powerless miniature, from rational admirer to disgusted observer, to expose the absurdities and flaws of human institutions. The novel questions the idea of progress, highlighting the dangers of pride, corruption, and impractical intellectualism.
Gulliver’s first journey takes him to Lilliput, a land inhabited by tiny people about six inches tall. Initially, they capture him but soon come to trust him due to his restraint and cooperation. He learns about their petty political disputes, particularly the rivalry between the Big-Endians and Little-Endians, who differ on the correct way to break an egg. This rivalry is a satirical representation of England’s religious conflicts. Lilliputian politics are marked by corruption, deception, and arbitrary favoritism, mirroring the absurdity of European court politics.
Gulliver helps the Lilliputians defeat their enemies, the Blefuscudians, by dragging their fleet across the sea, demonstrating his immense power. However, he soon falls out of favor due to courtly intrigues, his refusal to fully subjugate Blefuscu, and a scandal involving his urination to put out a palace fire. The Lilliputian emperor eventually turns against him, and he flees to Blefuscu before finding a way back to England.
Gulliver’s next adventure takes him to Brobdingnag, a land of giants where he is the tiny one. He is taken in by a farmer and exhibited as a curiosity before being sold to the Queen. Unlike Lilliput, where he was powerful, Gulliver is now weak and insignificant. He experiences firsthand the perspective of being at the mercy of others, often facing dangers from giant creatures and the casual disregard of his captors.
The Brobdingnagian king listens to Gulliver's descriptions of European politics and is appalled by the corruption, greed, and warmongering of humanity. He declares that European civilization is nothing but a den of vice and folly. Gulliver, however, remains blind to the satire, stubbornly defending his homeland. This section serves as a critique of European arrogance and self-importance. Eventually, an eagle snatches the tiny Gulliver and drops him into the sea, where he is rescued and returns to England.
Gulliver’s third journey takes him to Laputa, a floating island inhabited by scientists and intellectuals who are so engrossed in theoretical pursuits that they neglect practical matters. They govern Balnibarbi, a land below the island, but their obsession with abstract mathematics and music leads to ineffective policies that ruin the economy and infrastructure. This section satirizes the impracticality of speculative science and the detachment of intellectuals from real-world concerns.
Gulliver then visits Glubbdubdrib, where he meets the ghosts of historical figures, including Julius Caesar and Aristotle, and discovers how lies and vanity have distorted history. In Luggnagg, he encounters the Struldbrugs, immortals who continue to age indefinitely, becoming senile and miserable. Their existence serves as a cautionary tale about the desire for eternal life without eternal youth. Eventually, Gulliver reaches Japan, where he secures passage back to England.
Gulliver’s final voyage is to the land of the Houyhnhnms, intelligent and rational horses who govern a society based on reason, truth, and morality. They live in stark contrast to the Yahoos, filthy, animalistic, human-like creatures who embody greed, vice, and brutality. The Houyhnhnms have no concept of lying, war, or personal ambition, and their society is utopian in its simplicity and harmony.
Gulliver becomes enamored with the Houyhnhnms and grows to despise his own species, seeing humans as nothing more than refined Yahoos. He adopts their ways, striving to emulate their rationality and rejecting human society entirely. However, the Houyhnhnms see him as an unnatural being, a Yahoo with intelligence, and decide he cannot remain. Heartbroken, Gulliver is forced to leave and returns to England, but he can no longer tolerate human company. He withdraws from society and spends his days conversing with his horses, believing them to be superior to mankind.
Commentary
Each of Gulliver’s voyages serves as a mirror reflecting different aspects of human society. Lilliput satirizes political pettiness and conflict, Brobdingnag critiques European arrogance and moral hypocrisy, Laputa mocks the impracticality of theoretical science, and the Houyhnhnms highlight the tension between reason and human nature.
Gulliver’s gradual alienation from humanity serves as a dark reflection on the limitations of reason and morality. His journey ultimately suggests that humans, despite their intelligence, are deeply flawed and often blind to their own follies. With its layered satire and imaginative storytelling, Gulliver’s Travels remains a timeless and thought-provoking work.