Thursday, February 10, 2011

gulliver

In this i think the auther was already prety much a little offbalance but brelint. He used the difrent types of creatures and pepole to represent the world and show how we treat each other so difrently due to language and looks and that we all think if u do not look like me u are no good. i just wonder if it was dur to he was not all ther mentally or what type of drug was he on when he wrote this. Most great art or litature was done under the influnce of some drug or alchol or by a mentaly unstable person. but i enjoyed the tale very imensly and it is lot difrrent from the cartoon i watched growing up wich i suppose u take any thing and turn it into a serris for kids it will take a lot diffrent look from what the auther wanted. guliver was so wanting adventure he left a prgentet wife to go explore. When he was put on the island do u think he ate some kind of hulagnic plant and dreamed it all and is telling of what he dreamed or do u think the auther is say he actually exprenced all the creatures and tiny people. it is kinda simular to "Alice In Wonderland" execpt the mention of the drugs. It makes u think wich happened a unintened high or was it real. I wonder why he all ofsuden decides to call the horse his master dose he fell he has become a slave swift gives me support for this when he says "The Auther at his master's comands," seams like he has became a slave of some sort.

1 comment:

  1. I agree, I believe the author tries to make a connection with the characters and the real world. It seems as though the author was using weird, strange creatures to symbolize things in life such as things or people that are different than we are. He may also have been referring to stereotyping when he spoke of the yahoos and how they were treated. Yahoos were treated worse just because they were different, just like what happens in the real world.
    When Gulliver spoke of his "master", who was a horse, I don't know if he meant that he was a slave to his "master", but it does seem as though he has much respect for his "master."

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