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Satire In A Modest Proposal, By Jonathan Swift

Decent Essays

In 1729 a pamphlet was anonymously printed by Jonathan Swift that provided a solution to the impoverished state of the Irish nation. The work was titled, “A Modest Proposal”, and it holds within a solution to Ireland’s poverty through the murder and sale of children to be used as food and clothing. What should be noted is the work is highly satirical, and while the solution proffered by this essay in the form of a pamphlet was logistically and statistically sound, it proved to be against the palate of many who read it. Jonathan Swift creates compelling arguments within this particular satire through his exceptional use of emotional manipulation to establish his credibility, as well as stunningly unfair statistics to establish his true argument’s solid reasonability. Within “A Modest Proposal”, Swift constructs a ridiculous yet undeniably strong argument that perfectly accentuates the real solutions he has for Ireland’s poverty, which he mentions later on in the form of a counter argument. While ridiculous, the scarily logical argument that Swift presents for the consumption of children serves to perfectly demonstrate how genuinely logical his true solutions are, and the two arguments combined create a magnificent juxtaposition that mark Jonathan Swift as an excellent satirist cum rhetorician. Swift immediately sets the groundwork for his essay with an exemplary use of pathos to set the scene of Ireland during this time. He talks of how the streets are crowded with beggars, especially “beggars of the female-sex, followed by three, four, or six children..” (Paragraph 1) as well as how the children, “as they grow up, either turn thieves for want of work, or leave their dear native country..”(Paragraph 1) He weaves his essay’s empathic credibility into the scenes of poverty, anguish, misery, begging, and general dismal scene that Ireland proved to be at that time. He uses the kairos of the situation in Ireland to establish his pathos, and then uses the pathos of his essay to establish his ethos when he states he has a solution. He truly masterfully understands the situation, and while to be truly effective it counts on the reader understanding the situation properly, even just how he sets the scene can be enough

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