English, asked by rutvagAareeshnaz, 1 year ago

Gulliver character as a change the man at the end of the novel

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Answered by Reub3n
0
At the end of the novel Gulliver is a changed man. His rejection for his own race, i.e. human race and preference of Houyhnhnms over human beings suggests his dissatisfaction for the way man conducts himself, the way governments function and how vices have taken over and have become the ways of the world. He doesn't want to return home, for he is overwhelmingly impressed by the virtuous life of the Houyhnhnms, but he has to return due to the resistance of other Houyhnhnms who wanted him to either live like yahoo or return. He is left with no choice, but to go back. When he reached home he had huge difficulty in fitting into the rol of a husband and a normal person. He misses Master Horse so much that he buys two horses and talks to them. In a way, we can say that he was massively influenced by Houyhnhnms' way of life.

@Sudhalatawal, thank you :)
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