Wednesday, November 6, 2019
An Analysis of Gulivers Travels;Voyage to Liliput essays
An Analysis of Guliver's Travels;Voyage to Liliput essays    Generations of schoolchildren raised on the  first Book of     "Gulliver's Travels" have loved it as a delightful visit to a     fantasy kingdom full of creatures they can relate to_little     creatures, like themselves. Few casual readers look deeply enough     to recognize the satire just below the surface. But Jonathan Swift     was one of the great satirists of his or any other age, and     "Gulliver's Travels" is surely the apex of his art.     "Gulliver's Travels" tells the story of Lemuel Gulliver, a ship's     surgeon who has a number of rather extraordinary adventures,     comprising four sections or "Books." In Book I, his ship is blown     off course and Gulliver is shipwrecked. He wakes up flat on his     back on the shore, and discovers that he cannot move; he has been     bound to the earth by thousands of tiny crisscrossing threads. He     soon discovers that his captors are tiny men about six inches     high, natives of the land of Lilliput. He is released from his     prone position only to be confined in a ruined temple by ninety-     one tiny but unbreakable chains. In spite of his predicament,     Gulliver is at  first impressed by the intelligence and     organizational abilities of the Lilliputians.     In this section, Swift introduces us to the essential conflict of     Book I: the naive, ordinary, but compassionate "Everyman" at the     mercy of an army of people with "small minds". Because they are     technologically adept, Gulliver does not yet see how small-minded     In Chapter II, the Emperor of Lilliput arrives to take a look at     the "giant", and Gulliver is equally impressed by the Emperor and     his courtiers. They are handsome and richly dressed, and the     Emperor attempts to speak to Gulliver civilly (although they are     unable to understand one another). The Emperor decrees that every     morning Gulliver is to be delivered "six beeves, forty sheep, and     other victuals," along with as much bread and wine as he needs,     his basic needs are to be ...     
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