Referat Summary Gulliver
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(Summary)
First Voyage (Liliput). Gulliver, ship’s doctor on the
Anteope in shipwreked near Van Diemend’s Land (Tasmania) but mananges
to make shore, where he falls unconcious. Upon awakening, he finds
himself a captive of humans only six inches tall (possibly derived from
Philostrautus’s account of the pygmies capturing the sleeping
Hercules). After learning the Liliputan language and obeying the laws of
his diminutive captors, Gulliver is permited to tour the capital city of
Mildendo, which he finds a tiny republic of contemporany European
cityes. Gulliver becomes a nobleman of Liliput when he single handedly
carries of the entire warfleet of the hostile neighboring kindom,
Blefuscu, but Gulliver champions a generous peace, which the Lilipuian
parliament approves. In disfavor at court because he put out a fire in
qweens palace, Gulliver visits Blefuscu. Here he finds a battered
ship’s boat cast ashore. With the aid of Blefuscar workers he
refurbishes the boat and sails away, to be picked up by an English
vessel.
Swift’s incredible ingeniuty in adapting everything to the six-inch
scale of Liliputians has ironically rendered this adult santire a
nursery favourite. Swift calculates exactly how many Liliputian blankets
have to be sewn together for Gulliver, and he even allows for the
hemming. Beguiled, the reader hardly realizes that he is being led into
santire, but the major attention of this book is to demonstrate the
pettines of human affairs as viewed by a giant from another world.
The vehemence of Whing and Tory becomes preposterous in th Liliputian
contention of the low-heelers (Low Church) versus the high-heelers (High
Church), and the battling of Catholics and Protestants is starized in
the contention of the Big-Enders versus the Little-Enders (Which end off
the egg should be cracked first?).
The war between England and France is reduced to the absurd comflict
between Liliput and Blefuscu, swift also incorporated muchspecific
santire on English politics arownd 1712-15 Nonetherless, certain
passagers in chapter 6, treating of law andeducation in Liliput, are
essentially utopiain, picturing this minute wold as the rational ideal.
Second Voyage (Brobdingang). Wandering away from a landing party of the
Adventure on the coast of Great Tartary, Gulliver is trapped in a field
of giant corn forty feet high. Brobodignagiants themselves are normaly
sixty feet tall; Gulliver is captured and becomes the pet of a
nine-year-old farmer’s daughter, not yet over forty feet tall. As a
curiosity he is sold to the queen of the kingdom, who lets the court
physicians and philosophers study Gulliver as a frak. The puny Gulliver
has narrow escapes from rats the size of lions, wasps as large as
partridges, and hailstones as large as tennis balls. To the tiny fellow
the giants of Brobdingang often appear ugly and ill favored, but this
land knows only peace and simplicity. The nonarch is horrified at
European politics and disgusted at European warfare. â€ÂI cannot but
conclude,†the giant ruler sadly opines, “the Bulk of your Natives,
to be the most pernicious Race of little odious Vermin that Nature ever
suffered to crawl upon the Surface of the Earthâ€Â. At the end of the
account a huge bird snatches up the portable box containing Gulliver and
drops hin into the sea, fromwhence he is hauled aboard a vessel bound
for England.
Swift’s ingenuity again is unflagging, with everything in Brobdingdang
suitably ten times its normal size as everything in Liliput was tenth of
normal size. Gulliver is the prime naif (Does the name Gulliver come
from “gullible�) wholly commited to the glories of European
civilization; however, the more he praises the culture from wich he
came, the more monsrtous it appears in comparasion to the rational
giants of Brobdingang. Swift’s attack is centred upon human pride, ,
and this book denounces man’s vanit yconcentring his mind, man’s
pleasure in his own body, and man’s unconscionable behaviour toward
his fellows.
The principal edition of the Jonathan Swift’s novel named Travels in
Several Remote Nations of the World by Samuel Gulliver appeared in 1726.
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