AUTHORS
Alcott,
Louisa May
Alighieri,
Dante
Andersen,
Hans Christian
Austen,
Jane
Balzac,
Honore de
Barrie,
James M.
Bierce,
Ambrose
Blake,
William
Bronte,
Emily
Bronte,
Charlotte
Bronte,
Anne
Bulfinch,
Thomas
Burnett,
Francis Hodgson
Burroughs,
Edgar Rice
Byron,
Lord George Gordon
Carroll,
Lewis
Cervantes,
Miguel de
Chaucer,
Geoffrey
Chekhov,
Anton
Chesterton,
Gilbert Keith
Christie,
Agatha
Coleridge,
Samuel Taylor
Conrad,
Joseph
Cooper,
James Fenimore
Crane,
Stephen
Darwin,
Charles
Defoe,
Daniel
Dickens,
Charles
Dickinson,
Emily
Donne,
John
Dostoevsky,
Fyodor
Douglass,
Frederick
Doyle,
Arthur Conan
Dumas,
Alexandre
Eliot,
George
Emerson,
Ralph Waldo
Fitzgerald,
F. Scott
Forster,
E.M.
Frost,
Robert
Grahame,
Kenneth
Hardy,
Thomas
Hawthorne,
Nathaniel
Henry,
O
Hesse,
Hermann
Homer
Hugo,
Victor
Huxley,
Aldous
Irving,
Washington
James,
Henry
Joyce,
James
Keats,
John
Kipling,
Rudyard
Lamb,
Charles
Lawrence,
D.H.
Leroux,
Gaston
London,
Jack
Longfellow,
Henry Wadsworth
Machiavelli,
Niccolo
Maupassant,
Guy de
Melville,
Herman
Milton,
John
Montgomery,
Lucy Maud
More,
Thomas
Orwell,
George
Poe,
Edgar Allan
Scott,
Sir Walter
Shakespeare,
William
Shaw,
George Bernard
Shelley,
Mary Wollstonecraft
Shelley,
Percy Bysshe
Sinclair,
Upton
Smith,
Adam
Sophocles
Stevenson,
Robert Louis
Stoker,
Bram
Stowe,
Harriet Beecher
Swift,
Jonathan
Tennyson,
Lord Alfred
Thoreau,
Henry David
Tolstoy,
Leo
Twain,
Mark
Tzu,
Sun
Verne,
Jules
Virgil
Voltaire,
Francois-Marie Arouet
Wells, Herbert George
Wharton,
Edith
Wilde,
Oscar
Woolf,
Virginia
Wordsworth,
William
Yeats,
William Butler
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Jonathan Swift Biography
Irish author and journalist, dean
of St. Patrick's Cathedral (Dublin) from 1713, the foremost prose
satirist in English language. Swift became insane in his last
years, but until his death he was known as Dublin's foremost
citizen. Among Swift's best known works is Gulliver's Travels
(1726), where the stories of Gulliver's experiences among dwarfs
and giants are best known. Swift gave to these journeys an air of
authenticity and realism and not a few contemporary readers
believed them to be true.
"They look upon fraud as a greater crime than theft, and
therefore seldom fail to punish it with death; for they alledge,
that care and vigilante, with a very common understanding, may
preserve a man's goods from thieves; but honesty hat no fence
against superior cunning: and since it is necessary that there
should be a perpetual intercourse of buying and selling, and
dealing upon credit; where fraud is permitted or connived at, or
hath no Law to punish it, the honest dealer is always undone and
the knave gets the advantage." (from Gulliver's Travels: 'A
Voyage to Lilliput')
Swift was born in Dublin. He studied at Kilkenny Grammar School
(1674-82), Trinity College in Dublin (1682-89), receiving his B.A.
in 1868 and M.A. in 1692. When the anti-Catholic Revolution of the
year 1688 aroused reaction in Ireland, Swift moved in security to
the household of Sir William Temple at Moor Park, Surrey, in
England. He worked there as a secretary (1689-95, 1696-99). In
1695 he was ordained in the Church of Ireland (Anglican), Dublin.
After Temple's death in 1699, Swift returned to Ireland. He made
several trips to London and gained fame with his essays.
Throughout the reign of Queen Anne (1702-14), Swift was one of the
central characters in the literary and political life of London.
"As the common forms of good manners were intended for
regulating the conduct of those who have weak understandings; so
they have been corrupted by the persons for whose use they were
contrived. For these people have fallen into a needless and
endless way of multiplying ceremonies, which have been extremely
troublesome to those who practice them, and insupportable to
everyone else: insomuch that wise men are often more uneasy at the
over civility of these refiners, than they could possibly be in
the conversations of peasants or mechanics." (from 'A
Treatise on Good Manners and Good Breeding', 1754)
From 1695 to 1696 Swift was the vicar of Kilroot, Laracor from
1700, and prebendary of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin (1701).
Between the years 1707 and 1709 he was an emissary for the Irish
clergy in London. Swift contributed to the 'Bickerstaff Papers'
and to the Tattler in 1708-09. He was a cofounder of the
Scriblerus Club, which included such member as Pope, Gay, Congreve
and Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford.
In 1710 Swift tried to open a political career among Whigs but
changed his party and took over the Tory journal The Examiner.
With the accession of George I, the Tories lost political power
and Swift withdrew to Ireland. Esther Vanhomrigh, whom Swift had
met in 1708, followed him to Ireland, where she later proposed
marriage to him. Swift rejected it and wrote the poem 'Cadenus and
Vanessa' and in 1723 he broke off the relationship. From 1713 to
1742 he was the dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral. It is thought
that Swift suffered from Ménière's disease and many considered
him insane - however, from the beginning of his twentieth year he
had suffered from deafness. Swift had predicted his mental decay
when he was about 50 and had remarked to the poet Edward Young
when they were gazing at the withered crown of a tree: "I
shall be like that tree, I shall die from the top." He died
in Dublin on October 19, 1745. As a churchman Swift had spent a
third of his earnings on charities and he saved another third each
year to found St. Patrick's Hospital for Imbeciles in 1757. Swift
left behind a great mass of poetry and prose, chiefly in the form
of pamphlets. William Makepeace Thackeray once said of the author:
"So great a man he seems to me, that thinking of him is like
thinking of an empire falling."
"Principally I hate and detest that animal called man;
although I heartily love John, Peter, Thomas, and so forth."
(from a letter to Alexander Pope)
Swift's religious writing is little read today. His most famous
works include THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS (1697), exploring the merits
of the ancients and the moderns in literature. The authors of
renowned books take sides in the battle. Swift stated in it, that
"satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally
discover everybody's face but their own." A TALE OF A TUB
(1704) was a religious satire. It had at its core a simple
narrative of a father who has triplets and, upon his death, leaves
them each a coat which will grow with them. Although the book was
published anonymously, it established Swift's reputation.
In ARGUMENTS AGAINST ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY (1708) the narrator
argues for the preservation of the Christian religion as a social
necessity. When an ignorant cobbler named John Partridge published
an almanac of astrological predictions, Swift parodied it in his
book PREDICTION FOR THE ENSUING YEAR BY ISAAC BICKERSTAFF. He
foretold the death of John Partridge on March, 1708, and affirmed
on that day his prediction. Partridge protested that he was alive
but Swift proved in his 'Vindication' that he was dead. DRAPIER'S
LETTERS (1724) was against the monopoly granted by the English
government to William Wood to provide the Irish with copper
coinage. In A MODEST PROPOSAL (1729) the narrator with horrifying
logic recommends, that Irish poverty can solved by the breeding up
their infants as food for the rich. When the actor Peter O'Toole
read it - for some reason - in the reopening of the Gaiety Theatre
in Dublin in 1984, several members from the audience departed.
Gulliver's Travels (1726) - Defoe's novel about Robinson Crusoe
had appeared in 1719 and in the same vein Swift makes Lemuel
Gulliver, a surgeon and a sea captain, recount his adventures. In
part one, Gulliver is wrecked on an island where human beings are
six inches tall. The Lilliputians have wars, and conduct clearly
laughable with their self-importance and vanities - these human
follies only reduced into a miniature scale. Gulliver's second
voyage takes him to Brobdingnag. "I cannot but conclude that
the bulk of your natives to be the most pernicious race of little
odious vermin that nature ever suffered to crawl upon the surface
of the earth." (from Gulliver's Travels: 'A Voyage to
Brobdingnag') He meets giants who are practical but do not
understand abstractions. In the third voyage contemporary
scientist are held up for ridicule: science is shown to be futile
unless it is applicable to human betterment. Gulliver then travels
to the flying island of Laputa and the nearby continent and
capital of Lagado. There he meets pedants obsessed with their own
special field and utterly ignorant of the rest of the life. On the
island of Glubbdubdrib Gulliver encounters a community of
sorcerers who can summon the spirits of the dead, allowing him to
converse with Alexander, Julius Caesar, Aristotle and others. He
meets Struldbrughs, who are immortal and, as a result, utterly
miserable and become senile in their 80s. In the fourth part
Gulliver visits the land of Houyhnhnms, where horses are
intelligent but human beings are not. The horses are served with
degenerate creatures called Yahoos, demonstrating that human race
would destroy itself without divine aid. Swift wrote the book with
a serious purpose - "to mend the world". Gulliver's
Travels was a topical social satire, a work of propaganda, in
which Swift wanted to show the consequences of humanity's refusal
to be reasonable. It is still widely read all over the world -
especially the two first books are children's favorites - and open
to many interpretations. But when Defoe was an optimist, Swift's
in his bitter pessimism makes Gulliver return home, preferring the
company of horses to that of his family. - OTHER TRAVELLER'S
TALES: Homer's Odyssey, Marco Polo's Travels, Daniel Defoe's
Robinson Crusoe, adventures of Baron Münchausen by Rudolf Eric
Raspe (1737-1794), etc.
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