Voltaireâs âCandideâ and Jonathan Swiftâs âGulliverâs Travelsâ: vehicles for satire

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Order NowThroughout Voltaireâs Candide and Jonathan Swiftâs Gulliverâs Travels, the main characters of the works (Candide and Gulliver respectively) serve as vehicles for satire through which the authors can convey their views. It is important to note that both Candide and Gulliver serve as irons throughout the book; that is to say, the reader is shown irony through the actions of these characters, while at the same time the characters are naĂŻve and remain oblivious to their situation (on a satiric level, at least).
Candide is a humorous tale by Voltaire satirizing the optimism promoted by the philosophers of Enlightenment era. Throughout his travels, Candide adheres to the teachings of his tutor, Pangloss, believing that âall is for the best in the best of all possible worlds.â Candide is essentially Voltaireâs answer to what he saw as an absurd belief proposed by the so-called âenlightenedâ optimists of his era. Voltaire simply refused to believe that what happens is always for the best.
The attack on the statement that things are for âthe best of all possible worldsâ is a recurring theme throughout the entire novel, in which references to this claim satirically contrast with natural disaster and human wrongdoing. When reunited with the now-diseased Pangloss, Candide asks if the Devil is at fault. Pangloss simply responds that âthe disease was a necessity in âthe best of all possible worldsâ, for it was brought to Europe by Columbusâ men, who also brought chocolate and cochineal, two greater goods that well offset any negative effects of the disease'â.
Eventually though, due to a great number of misfortunes, Candide begins to âsee throughâ the blind optimism to the sheer hopelessness of Panglossâ philosophy. Voltaire concludes the book by having Candide discover that ââŠwork keeps us from three great evils; boredom, vice and need.â Candide and his band of followers consider these words and decide that they âmust cultivate their garden.â Even though a philosopher of the Enlightenment himself, Voltaire uses Candide as a platform to criticize the blind optimism of his peers.
Gulliverâs Travels was written by Jonathan Swift, at a time of political change and scientific invention, and many of the events he describes in the book can easily be linked to contemporary events in Europe. One of the reasons that the stories are deeply amusing is that, by combining real issues with entirely fantastic situations and characters, they suggest that the realities of 18th-century England were as fantastic as the situations in which Gulliver finds himself.
In Gulliverâs Travels, Swift satirizes the English political system and the absurdities in English society. He creates Lilliput and its very small citizens as a way to show his views on the ridiculous ways in which the English people win political offices. In England at the time, men were elected to a government office usually because of their prominent name, social status, wealth, or simply their skill in encouraging people to vote for them. Swift satirizes this by creating the story of the Lilliputians and their tightrope walking. Anyone who wishes to hold a political office in Lilliput must first perform a series of tricks on a tightrope in front of the public. The office they are elected to depends solely on their performance of these tricks. In this, Swift is saying that English politicians and legislators are not qualified for the offices they hold, and they have no knowledge of how to run a government. They are merely putting on a show for the public.
Swift also creates another civilization, Brobdingnag, in his stories, in which the citizens are twelve times larger than normal people. They are very honest and moral, and they have an ideal governmental system in which the king serves as a just and generous ruler. The nobles of Brobdingnag poke fun at the English for their system of party politics when Gulliver speaks of the Whigs and the Tories, and also ridicule English fashion. The king is appalled by the governmental practices that Gulliver praises and states that England is run by a government full of unqualified men who are ignorant and full of vice (odious vermin). Ironically, Gulliver loves his country and is upset by the kingâs attacks, but at the same time it is apparent that the government that Gulliver so adores is unscrupulous and its citizens are full of corruption.
By bringing to light fundamental yet very important problems with society through naive âironsâ, conveys to the reader the point that the he is driving at, maintains a sense of innocence (that is to say, itâs not the authors point of view, but the main charactersâ), and, while achieving these goals, still manages to entertain the reader with fantastical plots.