The Satire of Gulliver's Travel
In Jonathan Swift's masterpiece, Gulliver's Travels, he uses satire to exaggerate the pitfalls of the human race. Swift makes the human an unsavory animal. He then takes a horse, a simple work tool for humans, and makes them the sublime being. In this land, Gulliver soon discovers that he is unable to tolerate any Yahoos and his devotion is for the Houyhnhnms.
Gulliver, after being mistreated by his men on his ship, finds himself in a mysterious land. Ir...
Approximate word count: 504
Approximate pages: 2 (250 words per
double-spaced page) |