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CONTRASTING
CULTURES IN GULLIVER’S TRAVELS
NAME- PIPAVAT GOPI
CLASS- M.A.
SEM- 1
ROLL NO. - 31
TOPIC- CONTRASTING CULTURES IN GULLIVER’S
TRAVELS
SUBMITTED TO- SMT. S.B. GARDI DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH & M.K. BHAVNAGAR UNIVERSITY
EMAIL ID-PIPAVATGOPI2311 @gmail.com
YEAR- 2015-2016
Every land which
Gulliver visits is a wonderful land, and Gulliver’s experiences in every land
are strange or exciting, or amusing. In Lilliput,
the people are diminutives or dwarfs, hardly six inches in height. The very
idea that there are human beings so small is funny. But more amusing than that
is the manner in which Gulliver is fed. Several ladders are applied by the
Lilliputians to his sides, and about a hundred of them climb up those ladders
in order to carry baskets full of meat and drink and put them close to his
mouth. Similarly, it has taken nine hundred Lilliputians, three hours to raise
Gulliver to the level of a huge carriage by which he is carried to the royal
court. In the Metropolis, Gulliver becomes an object of curiosity, and people
come from far and near to look at him. He is given the name “man-mountain”.
Gulliver here lends his support to the king and the government of Lilliput
against the island
of Blefuscu , which has
been hostile to Lilliput, and he cripples the enemy fleet, thus winning the
appreciation and admiration of the Lilliputian king. One of the most amusing
incidents is Gulliver’s extinguishing a fire in the Empresses’ apartment by
urinating on it. The empress feels greatly annoyed with this action of Gulliver
and moves from that apartment to a different location. Some of the customs of
the Lilliputians are also a source of amusement. For instance, they bury their
dead with the heads of the corpses directly downwards because they hold a
belief that after eleven thousand moons, the dead would rise from their graves
and that during this period the earth would upside down so that the dead would,
on coming back to life, find themselves standing on their feet. another comic
absurdity of the Lilliputians is their manner of writing which is very
peculiar, being neither from the left to right, like that of the Europeans; nor
form the right to the left like that of the Arabians; nor from up to down like
that of the Chinese; nor from down to up like that of the Cascagians; but
aslant from one corner of the paper to the other, “like the ladies in England.”
Gulliver has to go through an ordeal when, on being informed that he will be
shortly impreached on several charges, he finds it necessary to make good his
escape from this country. The horses in this country were four inches high.
Sheep was only an inch high and hens and geese looked like many coloured flies.
The king was half an inch taller than any of his people and his face was strong
and manly. The uniform he wore was very plain, but his headdress was made of
gold and ornamented with jewels and feathers. Tightrope dancing was very
popular and applicants for official posts had to prove their skills in this
sport before they were accepted. Those who jumped highest on a white thread
which was hung three feet above the ground were judged most successful in the
examinations.
After this voyage, we find Gulliver in a strange and wonderful land called Brobdingnag. This land is
inhabited by monstrous-looking giants who are twelve times the height of
Gulliver. By contrast with these huge-looking men, Gulliver himself to be as
small as the Lilliputians was by contrast with him. Here too Gulliver becomes
an object of curiosity for the inhabitants, though for the opposite reason.
When Gulliver is first shown by his captor to his wife (who is as huge in size
and proportions as her husband), she screams and runs away as a woman in England
might do at
the sight of a toad or a spider. In other words, Gulliver looks like an insect
to the people here. The youngest son in the family of Gulliver’s captor lifts
Gulliver by the legs and holds him so high in the air that Gulliver begins to
tremble with fear. Then Gulliver sees a ct which is three times larger than an
ox in England ,
and he feels greatly alarmed by its fierceness. When the lady of the house
begins to suckle her child, Gulliver feels thoroughly disgusted on seeing the
huge, monstrous breasts of the woman. When Gulliver wakes up from his sleep, he
is attacked by a couple of rats which are of the size of a big dog. When
Gulliver is afterwards bought by the queen, he becomes a favourite with her. As
a consequence, the royal dwarf begins to feel jealous of Gulliver and plays much
mischief with him. On one occasion, the dwarf makes Gulliver fall into a large
bowl of cream. On another occasion, he thrusts Gulliver’s whole body into a
bone from which the marrow has been taken out. Gulliver also feels uneasy for
another reason. There are too many flies in Brobdingnag. The flies here are very
large, like all other creatures, and Gulliver feels much troubled by them as
they hum and buzz about his ears. He is also much tormented by the wasps which
are as large as the partridges in England . Referring to the royal
kitchen, Gulliver says that if he were to describe the size of the kitchen-
grate and the size of the pots and kettles, nobody would believe and think that
Gulliver is guilty of exaggeration. There are several mishaps during Gulliver’s
stay in Brobdingnag. Once an apple, falling from a tree, hits Gulliver on his
back and knocks him down flat on his face, because the apples here are also
very large. On another occasion, when Gulliver is standing on a grassy plot,
there is a sudden shower of hailstones which are nearly eighteen hundred times
as large as those in Europe . Gulliver is badly
injured by these hailstones. The royal maids of honour often play with Gulliver
as if Gulliver were a toy. On one occasion, Gulliver is carried off by a monkey
which is also very huge, and he is rescued with great difficulty. Eventually,
Gulliver is carried off by a huge eagle which drops him into the sea from where
he is picked up by a passing ship. This is Gulliver’s last adventure on his
second voyage. In this country, farming is also done. The rich people were
masters and were dressed well and the others who worked in the farmer’s field
were called workmen. Their dinner plate was about 24 feet wide. Their table was
30 feet high. Their house was very huge, room as big as a church and bed as
wide as a river and eight yards high. The king of Brobdingnag was fond of music
and very often had musical parties. In this country, there were no guns or no
gunpowder though there was always some conflict. In this country, no law is to
be allowed to be more than twenty two words long. They make small laws because
it could be easy and simple to understand. The biggest library in the kingdom
had only thousand books. Their army is not made up of regular soldiers, but
includes all the tradesman and farmers of the country who serve in town and
without pay.
Laputa is a wonderful island which keeps
flying at a height of about two miles from the earth over the continent of
Balnibarbi. This is in itself is a miracle. The people of Laputa have strange
shapes and faces. Their heads are all reclined either to the right or to the
left, one of their eyes being turned inward and the other directly up to the
zenith. Many of the Laputans are followed by flappers who carry in their hands
blown bladders fastened to the ends of short sticks. The function of these
flappers is to draw the attention of their masters to anything that might need
their attention, because the minds of their masters are so occupied by intense
speculations that they can neither speak nor listen to others without being
roused by some external action. Another strange feature of life on Laputa is
that mutton, beef, pudding and other eatables are given geometrical shapes or
the shapes of musical instruments. When these people want to praise the beauty
of a woman or another animal, they do so in geometrical or musical terms. The
men on this island are so busy inn their cogitations that their wives feel
compelled to make love to strangers instead of their husbands. When Gulliver
goes to Lagado, he witnesses the many experiments which are in progress at the Academy of Projectors . There is a project for
extracting sunbeams from cucumbers, a project for restoring human excrement to
its original food, a new method for building houses by beginning at the roof
and working downwards to the foundation and so on. There are several schemes
being developed at the school of political projects also. These are all very
amusing and impractical schemes. Gulliver’s visit to the island of Glubbdubdrib
is also very interesting because Gulliver finds himself in a place where ghosts
and spirits are in attendance upon the governor and where Gulliver is enabled
to hold conversations with the spirits of such great men of the past as
Alexander, Hannibal, Aristotle, homer and Brutus. Gulliver also sees a group of
immortal people in this place. These immortals are feeling wretched and
miserable because they long for death which does not come to them. The country
of the Yahoos and theHouyhnhnms, is also a
wonderland. This is a country in which human beings are no better than beasts,
while the horses show themselves to be superior to human beings. The horse or
the Houyhnhnm's are the noblest conceivable animals. They are
wholly governed by reason; they have a language of their own which they are
able even to teach to a human being like Gulliver; they have their own
excellent customs and methods of government; they are guided mainly by the
principles of benevolence and kindness. These strange or marvelous beings are
free from all kinds of evil, so much so that there is no word in their language
for lying or falsehood. They hold a periodical assembly to discuss their
affairs and to take necessary action to rectify things which have gone wrong;
they have their methods to control population. The Yahoos, who symbolize human
beings, are on the contrary despicable creatures who arouse our disgust and
abhorrence. Yahoos are a caricature of men, with all the good in human being
left out. The Yahoos have a prime minister; they have court flirtations; they
have acquisitive hoarders of shining stones; they become drunk and diseased;
they even have a fashionable malady as the spleen. All the evils of
civilization, and many of its professes glories, are caught in their elaborate
behavior.
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