Gullivers Travels Part 2
The second part of "Gulliver's Travels" was essentially the opposite of the first part. From being the largest, most respected man of Lilliput to the smallest of Brobdingnag, Gulliver was quickly humbled. I feel that was the objective of this section; you may be strong and powerful where you come from, but else where you can be the weakest link. Gulliver was nothing but a form of entertainment to the people of Brobdingnag. This could be a form of karma, for he abandoned his wife and children again, for his selfish obsession with traveling. The section ended with Gulliver saying "But my wife protested I should never go to sea again; although my evil destiny ordered, that she had not Power to hinder me. . ." (137). Despite being stranded in two very dangerous countries and abandoning his family for years, he still had not learned that his destiny was to stay home. This could possibly be a representation of the human race in the sense that we, as well as our rulers, make the same mistakes over and over again and allow history to repeat itself in numerous catastrophic ways.
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