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Swift and Others, by Claude Rawson

A collection of erudite essays examines the impact of the great tiger of English letters on other writers, learns Richard J. Larschan 

Published on
July 2, 2015
Last updated
July 2, 2015
Book review: Swift and Others, by Claude Rawson

Any collection of previously published essays raises the inevitable question: what holds the pieces together 鈥 aside from possible authorial vanity? A title such as Swift and Others could just as readily be cumulative as comparative, suggestive of the car-boot sale; but that is not at all the case with this carefully interwoven assemblage by a pre-eminent Swiftian.

Claude Rawson 鈥 a loyal alumnus of the 鈥渉ard school鈥 of Swift criticism, whose fellows include F. R. Leavis 鈥 offers significant insights into major works by Rochester, Dryden, Congreve, Pope, Mandeville, Fielding, Johnson, Gibbon, Austen (and even Norman Mailer), which he links via close comparative readings of the central paradoxes informing works such as Gulliver鈥檚 Travels and A Tale of a Tub.

Rejecting any attempt to de-claw the great tiger of English literature, the chapter on 鈥淕ibbon, Swift and irony鈥 best illustrates features that distinguish Swift鈥檚 鈥渦nstable鈥, 鈥渘egative鈥, 鈥渧iolent鈥 irony, invariably employed to 鈥渂etray鈥 rather than befriend his readers. Rawson鈥檚 analyses are especially persuasive in reminding us of the 鈥減aradox鈥f an aggressively slippery identity of views between Swift and the things or people he rejects鈥 that makes this religious and political conservative such a 鈥渞adical satirist鈥. Unlike Gibbon鈥檚 irony, for example, more often the 鈥淪wiftian trap鈥 allows for no 鈥渨inners鈥.

Rather than the 鈥渕ore moderate and tolerant Swift鈥 who emerged from 1950s criticism of Gulliver鈥檚 fourth voyage as a purported 鈥淎nglican Compromiser鈥, Rawson argues for 鈥渁n imagination partly given over to that disruptiveness of the mind which he both anatomized and knew he shared, even as he wrote to exorcise it鈥. Rawson鈥檚 persuasive analysis of the Tale reveals a style 鈥渕ore receptive to instabilities and unpredictable disruptiveness, and correspondingly less charmed with Popeian assurance鈥. Nowhere is that disruptiveness better illustrated than in the excerpts Rawson cites from the Tale 鈥 in particular, the frequent 鈥渕ock-editorial hiatus鈥 throughout. In this regard, an unfortunate Swiftian influence may be Rawson鈥檚 own recurring disruptive practice of inserting lengthy quotations mid-sentence.

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Samuel Johnson鈥檚 antipathy to Swift, with whom he shared 鈥減olitical opinions, and鈥nderlying modes of thought鈥, Rawson attributes to Johnson鈥檚 discomfort with irony in general and Swift鈥檚 鈥渇erocity鈥 in particular. Examining Johnson鈥檚 assessments, positive and negative, of Swift鈥檚 life and writings, Rawson detects 鈥渙ver-determination鈥 of the sort that suggests 鈥渁 degree of self-implication鈥 and 鈥減rojection鈥, which he sees as 鈥渋nverted self-identification鈥. Even without Swift, Rawson still manages to have fun with Johnson鈥檚 pudeur in response to sexual transgressions in Antony and Cleopatra, which caused him to dismiss Cleopatra鈥檚 鈥渇eminine arts鈥 as 鈥渢oo low鈥 and Antony as short on 鈥減omp鈥 and 鈥渢umidity鈥 鈥 鈥渢hough evidently鈥 (the hard school-boy Rawson cannot help adding) 鈥渃apable of tumescence when occasion requires鈥.

In an unstable irony worthy of his subject, Rawson suggests that 鈥渋t may be that Swift is best understood by those who dislike him鈥 鈥 a dislike obviously he does not share. He was perhaps thinking of one of Swift鈥檚 most quoted Thoughts on Various Subjects: 鈥淲hen a true Genius appears in the World, you may know him by this infallible Sign, that the Dunces are all in Confederacy against him.鈥 As these erudite essays remind us, whether for or against him, Swift was a pervasive 鈥渁nimating presence鈥 among writers from his day to ours.

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Richard J. Larschan is emeritus professor of English, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.


Swift and Others
By Claude Rawson
Cambridge University Press,聽320pp, 拢55.00 and 拢19.99
ISBN 9781107034785, 7610125 and 9781316308691 (e-book)
Published 19 March 2015

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