Gulliver's Travels and Other WritingsRandom House Publishing Group, 1962 - 656 pages Nominated as one of America’s best-loved novels by PBS’s The Great American Read “It is universally read, from the cabinet council to the nursery,” remarked Alexander Pope when Gulliver's Travels was published in 1726. One of the unique books of world literature, Swift's masterful satire describes the astonishing voyages of one Lemuel Gulliver, a ship's surgeon, to surreal kingdoms inhabited by miniature people and giants, quack philosophers and scientists, horses endowed with reason and men who behave like beasts. Written with great wit and invention, Gulliver's Travels is a savage parody on man and his institutions that has captivated readers for nearly three centuries. As bestselling author and critic Allan Bloom observed: “Gulliver's Travels is an amazing rhetorical achievement. Swift had not only the judgment with which to arrive at a reasoned view of the world but the fancy by means of which he could re-create that world in a form which teaches where argument fails and which satisfies all while misleading none.” This representative collection of Swift’s major writings includes the complete Gulliver’s Travels as well as A Tale of a Tub, “The Battle of the Books,” “A Modest Proposal,” “An Argument Against Abolishing Christianity,” “The Bickerstaff Papers,” and many more of his brilliantly satirical works. Here too are selections from Swift’s poetry and portions of his Journal to Stella. Swift’s savage ridicule, corrosive wit, and sparkling humor are fully displayed in this comprehensive collection. |
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Page 183
... things , it would be more convenient for all men to carry about them such things as were necessary to express the particular business they are to discourse on . And this invention would certainly have taken place , to the great ease as ...
... things , it would be more convenient for all men to carry about them such things as were necessary to express the particular business they are to discourse on . And this invention would certainly have taken place , to the great ease as ...
Page 234
... things which we have , or have the things which we want ; and we both fight , till they take ours or give us theirs . It is a very justifiable cause of war to invade a country after the people have been wasted by famine , destroyed by ...
... things which we have , or have the things which we want ; and we both fight , till they take ours or give us theirs . It is a very justifiable cause of war to invade a country after the people have been wasted by famine , destroyed by ...
Page 372
... things past and things conceived ; and so the question only this : whether things that have place in the imagina- n , may not as properly be said to exist , as those that are ted in the memory ; which may be justly held in the affirma ...
... things past and things conceived ; and so the question only this : whether things that have place in the imagina- n , may not as properly be said to exist , as those that are ted in the memory ; which may be justly held in the affirma ...
Contents
A VOYAGE TO LILLIPUT | 35 |
The Emperor of Lilliput attended by several | 45 |
The author diverts the Emperor and | 53 |
Copyright | |
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