![]() ![]() ![]() He is using the irony and the extremity of the solution to illustrate how grave the real problem is. Swift, however, is not seriously considering this as a possible solution to the problem in his motherland, Ireland. ![]() This will in-turn provide more jobs for butchers and cooks, which will get the beggars off of the streets. Rather then being a burden on society and their breeders, their mothers, they will be made useful as a form of nourishment and as a source of income for their parents. He figures these children have no future except to live the lives of their beggar parent or to become thieves. In his pamphlet, Jonathan Swift proposes that poor beggar mothers should sell their children when they have turned one year old. The use of irony in Jonathan Swift’s pamphlet makes his statement very powerful. This is where Swift’s irony comes into play. However, his proposal is not to be taken literally and is actually part of a much bigger plan. The proposal solves the problem but is in complete conflict with our ethical and moral values. Irony in “A Modest Proposal” The pamphlet by Jonathan Swift, originally titled, “A Modest Proposal for Preventing the Children of Poor People in Ireland from Being a Burden to Their Parents or Country, and for Making Them Beneficial to the Public,” starts out as an absurd attempt at solving the poverty and famine problem in Ireland. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |