What does gulliver compare his society with brooding nag in satarical way
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Swift's Gulliver's Travels (1.2329–2473) is a masterpiece of satire, employing a range of satiric modes against a wide variety of targets. In Part 1, dealing with Lilliput, the satire is chiefly political. The Lilliputians' bitter political controversies unmistakably mirror those of the British ruling class.
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In Book IV, Gulliver represents the middle ground between pure reason (as embodied by the Houyhnhnms) and pure animalism (as embodied by the depraved Yahoos), yet Gulliver's pride refuses to allow him to recognize the Yahoo aspects in himself.
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