Part III:A Voyage To Laputa, Balnibarbi, Luggnagg, Glubbdubdrib, And Japan
Chapter 1
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Part IV:A Votage To The Country of The Houyhnhnms
Chapter 1
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter IX
TRAVELS.
PART IV.
A VOYAGE TO THE COUNTRY OF THE HOUYHNHNMS.
CHAPTER IX.
A grand Debate at the General Assembly of the Houyhnhnms,
and how it was determined. The Learning of the Houyhnhnms. Their Buildings. Their
manner of Burials. The defectiveness of their Language.
ONE OF THESE Grand Assemblies was held in my time, about three Months before my
Departure, whither my Master went as the Representative of our District. In this Council
was resumed their old Debate, and indeed, the only Debate which ever happened in that
Country; whereof my Master after his Return gave me a very particular Account.
The Question to be debated was whether the Yahoos should
be exterminated from the Face of the Earth? One of the Members for the Affirmative
offered several Arguments of great Strength, and Weight, alledging That as the Yahoos
were the most filthy, noisome, and deformed Animal which Nature ever produced, so they
were the most restive and indocile, mischievous and malicious: They would privately suck
the Teats of the Houyhnhnms Cows, kill and devour their Cats, trample down their
Oats and Grass, if they were not continually watched, and commit a thousand other
Extravagancies. He took notice of a general Tradition, That Yahoos had not been
always in that Country: But, that many Ages ago, two of these Brutes appeared together
upon a Mountain, whether produced by the Heat of the Sun upon corrupted Mud and Slime, or
from the Ooze or Froth of the Sea, was never known. That these Yahoos engendered,
and their Brood in a short time grew so numerous as to over run and infest the whole
Nation. That theHouyhnhnms to get rid of this Evil, made a general Hunting, and at
last enclosed the whole Herd; and destroying the old Ones, every Houyhnhnm kept two
young Ones in a Kennel, and brought them to such a degree of Tameness, as an Animal so
savage by Nature can be capable of acquiring; using them for Draught and Carriage. That
there seemed to be much Truth in this Tradition, and that those Creatures could not be Ylnhniamshy
(or Aborigines of the Land), because of the violent Hatred the Houyhnhnms,
as well as all other Animals, bore them; which although their evil Disposition
sufficiently deserved, could never have arrived at so high a Degree, if they had been Aborigines,
or else they would have long since been rooted out. That the Inhabitants taking a Fancy to
use the Service of the Yahoos, had very imprudently neglected to cultivate the
Breed of Asses, which were a comely Animal, easily kept, more tame and orderly,
without any offensive Smell, strong enough for Labour, although they yield to the other in
Agility of Body; and if their Braying be no agreeable Sound, it is far preferable to the
horrible Howlings of the Yahoos.
Several others declared their Sentiments to the same Purpose,
when my Master proposed an Expedient to the Assembly, whereof he had indeed borrowed the
Hint from me. He approved of the Tradition, mentioned by the Honourable Member, who
spoke before, and affirmed, that the Two Yahoos said to be first seen among them
had been driven thither over the Sea; that coming to Land, and being forsaken by their
Companions, they retired to the Mountains, and degenerating by Degrees, became in process
of time, much more savage than those of their own Species in the Country from where these
two Originals came. The Reason of his assertion was that he had now in his Possession a
certain wonderful Yahoo, (meaning myself) which most of them had heard of, and many
of them had seen. He then related to them, how he first found me; that my Body was all
covered with an artificial Composure of the Skins and Hairs of other Animals: That I had a
Language of my own, and had thoroughly learned theirs: That I had related to him the
Accidents which brought me thither: That when he saw me without my Covering, I was an
exact Yahoo in every Part, only of a whiter Colour, less hairy, and with shorter
Claws. He added, how I had endeavoured to persuade him, that in my own and other
Countries, the Yahoos acted as the governing, Rational Animal, and held theHouyhnhnms
in Servitude: That he observed in me all the Qualities of a Yahoo, only a little
more civilized by some Tincture of Reason, which however was in a degree as far inferior
to the Houyhnhnm Race, as the Yahoos of their Country were to me: That among
other things, I mentioned a Custom we had of Castrating Houyhnhnms when they were
young, in order to render them tame: That the Operation was easy and safe; that it was no
Shame to learn Wisdom from Brutes, as Industry is taught by the Ant, and Building by the
Swallow. (For so I translate the Word Lyhannh, although it be a much larger Fowl.)
That this Invention might be practiced upon the younger Yahoos here, which, besides
rendering them tractable and fitter for Use, would in an Age put an End to the whole
Species without destroying Life. That, in the mean time the Houyhnhnms should be exhorted
to cultivate the Breed of Asses, which as they are in all respects more valuable Brutes,
so they have this Advantage, to be fit for Service at Five Years old, which the others are
not till twelve.
This was all my Master thought fit to tell me at that time, of
what passed in the Grand Council. But he was pleased to conceal one Particular, which
related Personally to myself, whereof I soon felt the unhappy Effect, as the Reader will
know in its proper Place, and from which I date all the succeeding Misfortunes of my Life.
The Houyhnhnms have no Letters, and consequently their
Knowledge is all Traditional. But there happening few Events of any Moment among a People
so well united, naturally disposed to every Virtue, wholly governed by Reason, and cut off
from all Commerce with other Nations, the Historical Part is easily preserved without
burthening their Memory. I have already observed, that they are subject to no Diseases,
and therefore can have no need of Physicians. However, they have excellent Medicines
composed of Herbs, to cure accidental Bruises and Cuts in the Pastern or Frog of the Foot
by sharp Stones, as well as other Maims and Hurts in the several Parts of the Body.
They calculate the Year by the Revolution of the Sun and the
Moon, but use no subdivisions into Weeks. They are well enough acquainted with the Motions
of those two luminaries, and understand the Nature of Eclipses; and this is the utmost
Progress of their Astronomy.
In Poetry they must be allowed to excel all other Mortals;
wherein the Justness of their Similes, and the Minuteness, as well as Exactness of their
Descriptions, are indeed inimitable. Their Verses abound very much in both of these, and
usually contain either some exalted Notions of Friendship and Benevolence, or the Praises
of those who were Victors in Races, and other bodily Exercises. Their Buildings, although
very rude and simple, are not inconvenient, but well contrived to defend them from all
Injuries of Cold and Heat. They have a kind of Tree which at Forty Years old loosens in
the Root, and falls with the first Storm; they grow very strait, and being pointed like
stakes with a sharp Stone, (for theHouyhnhnms know not the use of Iron) they stick
them erect in the Ground about ten Inches asunder, and then weave in Oat-straw, or
sometimes Wattles betwixt them. The Roof is made after the same Manner, and so are the
Doors.
The Houyhnhnms use the hollow Part between the Pastern and
the Hoof of their Fore-feet, as we do our Hands, and this with greater Dexterity, than I
could at first imagine. I have seen a White Mare of our Family thread a Needle (which I
lent her on purpose) with that Joynt. They milk their Cows, reap their Oats, and do all
the Work which requires Hands, in the same manner. They have a kind of hard Flints, which
by grinding against other Stones, they form into Instruments, that serve instead of
Wedges, Axes, and Hammers. With Tools made of these Flints, they likewise cut their Hay,
and reap their Oats, which there groweth naturally in several Fields: The Yahoos
draw home the Sheaves in Carriages, and the Servants tread them in several covered Huts,
to get out the Grain, which is kept in Stores. They make a rude kind of earthen and wooden
Vessels, and bake the former in the Sun.
If they can avoid Casualties, they die only of Old-Age, and are
buried in the obscurest Places that can be found, their Friends and Relations expressing
neither Joy nor Grief at their Departure; nor does the dying Person discover the least
Regret that he is leaving the World, any more than if he were upon returning home from a
Visit to one of his Neighbours. I remember my Master having once made an appointment with
a Friend and his Family to come to his House upon some Affair of Importance, on the Day
fixed, the Mistress and her two Children came very late; she made two Excuses, first for
her Husband, who, as she said, happened that very Morning to Lhnuwnh. The Word is
strongly expressive in their Language, but not easily rendered into English; it
signifies, to retire to his first Mother. Her Excuse for not coming sooner, was,
that her Husband dying late in the Morning, she was a good while consulting her Servants
about a convenient Place where his Body should be laid; and I observed she behaved herself
at our House, as chearfully as the rest, and died about three Months after.
They live generally to Seventy or Seventy-five Years, very
seldom to Fourscore: Some Weeks before their Death they feel a gradual Decay, but without
Pain. During this time they are much visited by their Friends, because they cannot go
abroad, with their usual Ease and Satisfaction. However, about ten Days before their
Death, which they seldom fail in computing, they return the Visits that have been made
them by those who are nearest in the Neighbourhood, being carried in a convenient Sledge
drawn by Yahoos, which Vehicle they use, not only upon this Occasion, but when they
grow old upon long Journeys, or when they are lamed by any Accident. And therefore when
the dying Houyhnhnms return those Visits, they take a solemn Leave of their
Friends, as if they were going to some remote Part of the Country, where they designed to
pass the rest of their Lives.
I know not whether it may be worth observing, that the Houyhnhnms
have no Word in their Language to express any thing that is Evil, except what they
borrow from the Deformities or ill Qualities of the Yahoos. Thus they denote the
Folly of a Servant, an Omission of a Child, a Stone that cut their Feet, a continuance of
foul or unseasonable Weather, and the like, by adding to each the Epithet of Yahoo.
For Instance, Hhnm Yahoo, Whnaholm Yahoo, Ynlhmndwihlma Yahoo, and an
ill-contrived House, Ynholmhnmrohlnw Yahoo.
I could with great Pleasure enlarge further upon the Manners and
Virtues of this excellent People; but intending in a short time to publish a Volume by
itself expressly upon that Subject, I refer the Reader thither. And in the mean time,
proceed to relate my own sad Catastrophe.