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Gulliver's Travels
[ guhl-uh-verz ]
noun
- a social and political satire (1726) by Jonathan Swift, narrating the voyages of Lemuel Gulliver to four imaginary regions: Lilliput, Brobdingnag, Laputa, and the land of the Houyhnhnms.
Gulliver's Travels
- (1726) A satire by Jonathan Swift . Lemuel Gulliver, an Englishman, travels to exotic lands, including Lilliput (where the people are six inches tall), Brobdingnag (where the people are seventy feet tall), and the land of the Houyhnhnms (where horses are the intelligent beings, and humans, called Yahoos , are mute brutes of labor).
Notes
Example Sentences
From the ashes of Morey鈥檚 proposed book came 鈥淪mall Ball,鈥 about a small team with big basketball dreams set on the fictional Lilliput island out of 鈥淕ulliver鈥檚 Travels.鈥
On the map included in Volume II of his 1726 satire 鈥淕ulliver鈥檚 Travels,鈥 Jonathan Swift depicts it as an enormous peninsula somewhere north of California.
She viewed Jonathan Swift's own, annotated, copy of his book Gulliver's Travels, during her visit to the library.
There鈥檚 an interesting case study of fellow M茅ni猫re鈥檚 sufferer Jonathan Swift and his struggles while trying to write 鈥淕ulliver鈥檚 Travels.鈥
Afterward, curator Carolyn Vega displayed island-related treasures from the NYPL鈥檚 Berg Collection, such as Robert Louis Stevenson鈥檚 copy of 鈥淕ulliver鈥檚 Travels鈥 and a proof page of Darwin鈥檚 鈥淥n the Origin of Species,鈥 with its author鈥檚 marginal corrections.
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