In Ireland Swift kept an eye on the political events of London.
He wrote political pamphlets in defense o f th e Whigs. His
contributions to “The Tattler”, “The Spectator” and other
magazines show how well he understood the spirit o f the time.
Swift’s conversations with the leaders of the English political parties
are described in his letters to Stella (Esther). These letters became
his famous work “Journal lo Stella”.
In 1713 Swift was made Dean o f St. Patrick’s
Cathedral in
Dublin. In Ireland Swift came into contact with common people
and saw miserable conditions under which the population lived.
Swift wrote pamphlets criticizing the colonial policy of England.
In 1726 Swift’s masterpiece “Gulliver’s Travels” appeared and it
made a great sensation.
In 1728 Stella died after a long illness. This loss affected Swift
deeply.
Conditions in Ireland between 1700 and 1750 were disastrous.
Famine depopulated whole regions.
Some areas were covered
with unburied corpses. Swift wrote the pamphlets: “The Present
Miserable State of Ireland ’, “A Modest Proposal for Preventing
the Children of Poor People from Being a Burden to Their Parents
or the Country” and others.
Hard work and continuous disappointments in life undermined
Swift’s health. By the end o f 1731 his mind was failing rapidly. In
1740 his memory' and reason were gone and he became completely
deaf. He died on the 19h o f October 1745, in Dublin.
During all his hard later years o f a mental decline his friends
stayed loyal to him. The Irish people
continue to this day to
celebrate him as a hero. The generosity o f spirit,
deep learning,
genuine humor were characteristic features o f his writing, and
they were a great gift to the literary tradition.
“Gulliver’s Trave:.s”
In “Gulliver’s Travel,»” (originally the novel was called “Travels
into Several Remote Nations of the World
by Lemuel Gulliver,
First a Surgeon and then a Captain o f Several Ships”) Swift
criticized and satirized the evils of the existing society in the form
of f'ctitio
js
travels. Apart from being a good story, it is the indictment
o f the human race for refusing reason and benevolence as the
ways o f life. The scenes and nations described in the book are so
extraordinary
and amusing, that the novel still arouses interest
with both children and adults. It covers the adventures of a ship
surgeon who is washed up on a number o f imaginary shores. The
novel is divided into four parts that are actually four voyages:
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