Gulliver's Travels
Anonymous
Publisher: The Ebook Emporium
Summary
"I told him that should he happen to see a man who was extremely tall, he would be very much mistaken if he thought him a giant." Shipwrecked physician Lemuel Gulliver embarks on four extraordinary journeys that challenge his—and the reader's—perception of reality. From the tiny, war-mongering citizens of Lilliput to the towering, moral giants of Brobdingnag, and from the floating pseudo-intellectual city of Laputa to the noble, rational horses known as Houyhnhnms, Gulliver encounters civilizations that mirror the best and worst of humanity. What begins as a quest for discovery turns into a devastating critique of British society, religious conflict, and the very definition of being "human." The Scale of Perspective: In the first two books, Swift uses physical size as a metaphor for moral stature. In Lilliput, Gulliver is a giant among petty, small-minded politicians who fight over which end of an egg to crack. In Brobdingnag, he becomes a literal "toy," forced to defend the "grandeur" of Europe to a King who views humans as "the most pernicious race of little odious vermin." The Critique of Reason: The voyage to the flying island of Laputa serves as a hilarious yet biting attack on theoretical science and useless "intellectualism." Here, Swift mocks the Royal Society with "Projectors" who try to extract sunbeams from cucumbers while their people starve in the ruins of neglected farms. The Final Epiphany: Man vs. Beast: The novel reaches its peak in the land of the Houyhnhnms, where rational horses rule over the filthy, impulsive Yahoos—creatures that Gulliver realizes, with horror, are actually human beings. This final encounter forces Gulliver into a state of misanthropy, forever changing how he views his own family and kind. Experience the world through a different lens. Purchase "Gulliver's Travels" today and discover why it remains the most dangerous comedy ever written.
