English, asked by playzombo, 4 months ago

describe the event of gullivers pocket inventory in 100 words​

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Answered by XxxRAJxxX
8

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Gulliver is desperate to relieve himself so the first thing he does in his new house is defecate on the floor. He assures the reader that he only did this that one time out of desperation and, in the future, he defecated at the far length of his chain in the open air and it was cleaned up by Lilliputian servants.

Gulliver is desperate to relieve himself so the first thing he does in his new house is defecate on the floor. He assures the reader that he only did this that one time out of desperation and, in the future, he defecated at the far length of his chain in the open air and it was cleaned up by Lilliputian servants.This anecdote introduces the symbol of excrement and is the first of many examples of Gulliver’s dedication to honesty: he doesn’t edit out details, even for the sake of politeness or propriety.

Gulliver is desperate to relieve himself so the first thing he does in his new house is defecate on the floor. He assures the reader that he only did this that one time out of desperation and, in the future, he defecated at the far length of his chain in the open air and it was cleaned up by Lilliputian servants.This anecdote introduces the symbol of excrement and is the first of many examples of Gulliver’s dedication to honesty: he doesn’t edit out details, even for the sake of politeness or propriety.Gulliver is fed and visited by the Lilliputian emperor, who is a human-nail’s-width taller than his subjects and very handsome. The two of them converse without understanding each other, each in their own language. Onlookers who shoot an arrow at Gulliver are seized and handed over to Gulliver who picks them up, scares them with a mean face and a glimpse of his penknife, and then releases them. The Lilliputians are delighted by Gulliver’s gentleness.

Gulliver is desperate to relieve himself so the first thing he does in his new house is defecate on the floor. He assures the reader that he only did this that one time out of desperation and, in the future, he defecated at the far length of his chain in the open air and it was cleaned up by Lilliputian servants.This anecdote introduces the symbol of excrement and is the first of many examples of Gulliver’s dedication to honesty: he doesn’t edit out details, even for the sake of politeness or propriety.Gulliver is fed and visited by the Lilliputian emperor, who is a human-nail’s-width taller than his subjects and very handsome. The two of them converse without understanding each other, each in their own language. Onlookers who shoot an arrow at Gulliver are seized and handed over to Gulliver who picks them up, scares them with a mean face and a glimpse of his penknife, and then releases them. The Lilliputians are delighted by Gulliver’s gentleness.These interactions confirm Gulliver’s choice to exert moral rather than physical power. He converses peacefully with the Lilliputian emperor (even though they can’t understand one another) and lets the arrow-shooters free without any bodily punishment.

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