17 Facts About Gulliver's Travels

1.

Gulliver's Travels is given permission by the King of Lilliput to go around the city on condition that he must not hurt their subjects.

FactSnippet No. 649,133
2.

Gulliver's Travels is rescued by the flying island of Laputa, a kingdom devoted to the arts of music, mathematics, and astronomy but unable to use them for practical ends.

FactSnippet No. 649,134
3.

Gulliver's Travels is abandoned in a landing boat and comes upon a race of deformed savage humanoid creatures to which he conceives a violent antipathy.

FactSnippet No. 649,135
4.

Gulliver's Travels is disgusted to see that Captain Pedro de Mendez, whom he considers a Yahoo, is a wise, courteous, and generous person.

FactSnippet No. 649,136
5.

Gulliver's Travels has been described as a Menippean satire, a children's story, proto-science fiction and a forerunner of the modern novel.

FactSnippet No. 649,137

Related searches

Yahoo
6.

Gulliver's Travels has been eight years upon a project for extracting sunbeams out of cucumbers, which were to be put in phials hermetically sealed, and let out to warm the air in raw inclement summers.

FactSnippet No. 649,138
7.

Gulliver's Travels told me, he did not doubt, that, in eight years more, he should be able to supply the governor's gardens with sunshine, at a reasonable rate: but he complained that his stock was low, and entreated me "to give him something as an encouragement to ingenuity, especially since this had been a very dear season for cucumbers".

FactSnippet No. 649,139
8.

Gulliver's Travels generally accepts what he is told at face value; he rarely perceives deeper meanings; and he is an honest man who expects others to be honest.

FactSnippet No. 649,140
9.

Gulliver's Travels quickly becomes fluent in the native tongues of the strange lands in which he finds himself, a literary device that adds verisimilitude and humour to Swift's work.

FactSnippet No. 649,141
10.

Indeed, many adaptations of the story are squarely aimed at a young audience, and one can still buy books entitled Gulliver's Travels which contain only parts of the Lilliput voyage, and occasionally the Brobdingnag section.

FactSnippet No. 649,142
11.

Along similar lines, Crane holds that Gulliver's Travels misanthropy is developed in part when he talks to the Houyhnhnms about mankind because the discussions lead him to reflect on his previously held notion of humanity.

FactSnippet No. 649,143
12.

Specifically, Gulliver's Travels master, who is a Houyhnhnm, provides questions and commentary that contribute to Gulliver's Travels reflectiveness and subsequent development of misanthropy.

FactSnippet No. 649,144
13.

Stone points out that Gulliver's Travels takes a cue from the genre of the travel book, which was popular during Swift's time period.

FactSnippet No. 649,145
14.

Captain Pedro provides a contrast to Gulliver's Travels reasoning, proving humans are able to reason, be kind, and most of all: civilized.

FactSnippet No. 649,146
15.

Gulliver sees the bleak fallenness at the center of human nature, and Don Pedro is merely a minor character who, in Gulliver's Travels words, is "an Animal which had some little Portion of Reason".

FactSnippet No. 649,147
16.

Gulliver's Travels concluded that he could not understand the origins of Swift's critiques on humanity.

FactSnippet No. 649,148
17.

The earliest of these was the anonymously authored Memoirs of the Court of Lilliput, published 1727, which expands the account of Gulliver's Travels stays in Lilliput and Blefuscu by adding several gossipy anecdotes about scandalous episodes at the Lilliputian court.

FactSnippet No. 649,149