Behold, after above six Months Warning, I cannot learn that my Book hath produced one single Effect according to mine Intentions: … And, it must be owned that seven Months were a sufficient Time to correct every Vice and Folly to which Yahoos are subject, if their Natures had been capable of the least Disposition to Virtue or Wisdom: (Letter; 3) That he had good Reasons to think you were a Big-Endian in your heart; and as Treason begins in the Heart, before it appears in Overt-Acts, so he accused you as a Tractor on that Account, and therefore insisted you should be put to death. (I: 7; 22) He knew no reason why those who entertained opinions prejudicial to the public should be obliged to change, and should not be obliged to conceal them. And as it was tyranny in any government to require the first, so it was weakness not to enforce the second; for a man may be allowed to keep poisons in his closet, but not to send them about for cordials. (II: 6; 15) 1. Author: Jonathan Swift Titles of some other works by the same author: Tale of a Tub, The Battle of the Books 2.
Title: Gulliver’s Travels Books (I & II) Explain the Title: The book tells about the travels of Gulliver. 3. Date of publication: 1977 4. Edition: Everyman First published: 17265. Genre: Four satirical stories in prose. 6.
Themes: A satire, in the first book he satirizes the English politics, which are symbolized by the inhabitants of Lilliput. Inthe second book Gulliver symbolizes the English people. He tells the king of Brobdingnag about the Daily life in England. The King tells him as follows:’ By what I have gathered from your own relation… I cannot but conclude 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 earth’.
7. List of main characters and description of them: – Lemuel Gulliver: a married man, who has studied medicines and works as a ship surgeon. He likes to travel a lot because he is very interested in other country’s and their cultures. 8. Narrative Technique: Narrative prose. 9.
a) Time lapse: Liliput ~n 1 year Brobdingnag ~n 2 years) In what period is the story situated? 18 th century. 10. Style: Language is quite difficult, old-English. 11. Stray notes: none 12.
What is your own opinion of the work? I found the book quite difficult, but I liked the satirical aspect of the stories. 13. Short summary: On his first voyage Gulliver is shipwrecked. He comes in Lilliput, a land were all the people are times as short ashe is. He learns their language their laws and their habits.
He gets a title of honour when he takes the fleet of Blefuscu out of the water. But when he makes water on the emperor’s palace it’s decided he should die. But he escapes. On his second voyage he gets into a great storm and comes in aland of giants (12 times as big as he is). He is found by a farmer.
Who takes him to a market and to the metropolis. He is sold to the queen. He learns that these people are very nice. At the end he is picked up by a large bird and dropped in the sea, where he is picked up by a ship.
NAAM! ! ! ! ! ! ! 10-Feb-1990, 6-III Jonathan Swift Gulliver’s Travels I & III. A voyage to Liliput Gulliver always wanted to go to sea. He has studied a lot for it. On one of his voyages his ship is shipwrecked.
He is the only one who reaches land. He falls asleep. When Gulliver wakes up he is bound to the ground. Then he sees the Lilliputians, men not taller than a few inches. They take him to the town. They keep him prisoner but take care of him.
The emperor of Liliput, a little bit taller than the other Lilliputians, comes to see Gulliver, who makes a good impression on him. He is taught the language of Liliput. Gulliver is set free on the condition he will not leave Liliput. The emperor tells Gulliver aboutLiliput’s two problems: The internal conflict between the low-and the high-heels and the conflict with Blefuscu, another country. The war is fought about the question: on which end one should cut an egg.
To help the emperor Gulliver takes the fleet of Blefuscu to Liliput. Gulliver gets a title of honour. But when he refuses to colonize Blefuscu and makes water on the emperor’s palace (it was on fire), it is decided his eyes will be put out and he will starve to death. Fortunately he is informed and escapes to Blefuscu, where he finds a boat of normal size and he escapes to the sea and is picked up by a passing ship which brings him home. II. On his second voyage, Gulliver’s ship gets into a storm and they get hundred of miles out of course.
When they go ashore for freshwater, Gulliver is left at the island. He is caught by a farmer, twelve times as high as he is. The farmer gives him to his daughter who takes good care of him and teaches him the language of Brobdingnag. He calls her Glumdalclitch. The farmer uses Gulliver as an attraction at the markets and in pubs, but this reduces Gulliver’s health, so the farmer sells him and his daughter to the Queen. Everyone there is delighted with him except for the Queen’s dwarf, who doesn’t get the attention he used to get.
The Queen gets Gulliver a kind of cage in which he can live and be transported. Gulliver learns that these people are very kind. (No corruption, conspiracy and clear laws). When he offers the King to make gunpowder it is rejected. One day Gulliver gets to the seashore and is picked up by a bird which drops him in the sea. There his found by a passing ship.
UTOPIA Genre: Philosophical travel fiction married to autobiography and satire. More’s playful fusing of genres is characteristic of European humanism, as is his self-deflating wit. The text contains many layers of protective narrative insulation, especially More’s decision to deliver the most radical comments from the persona of the character, Raphael Hythloday. The ‘conversation overheard’ does not entirely exculpate the hearer who reports it, though, as readers of Chaucer realize after serious consideration of the General Prologue (ll.
727-48) and the prologue to the Miller’s Tale (ll. 59-78). Characters: ‘More’ (in quotes to distinguish him from More, the author); Raphael Hythloday the traveler from Utopia; Peter Giles, More’s and ‘More”s friend and a native of Antwerp (Belgium); King Ut opus, founder of Utopia; the Anemolianambassadors, and other minor members of Utopian society. Plot Summary: On a diplomatic trip to Brussels, ‘More’ takes a side trip to the seaport of Antwerp where he falls into conversation with Peter Giles and Giles’ acquaintance, Raphael Hythloday, who sailed with Ameri go Vespucci.
The men go to ‘More”s house where, in the garden, Raphael tells them of the history, customs and culture of the Utopians.