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1[[quoteright:199:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/001_gullivers_travels_2725.jpg]]
2
3->''"It is computed that eleven thousand persons have at several times suffered death rather than submit to break their eggs at the smaller end [...] Neither are any wars so furious and bloody, or of so long continuance as those occasioned by difference in opinion, especially if it be in things indifferent."''
4-->-- Musings upon the Big/Little end heresy, ''Gulliver's Travels''
5
6One of the precursors of SpeculativeFiction, ''Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. By Lemuel Gulliver, First a Surgeon, and then a Captain of several Ships'' was written by Creator/JonathanSwift as a parody of the [[ForgottenTrope now-dead genre]] of traveller's tale, satirising 18th century follies, but is now, sadly, largely remembered as a children's tale, despite being Swift's masterpiece and a [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids heavily satirical and adult book]].
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8On Gulliver's first voyage he is shipwrecked in Lilliput, where everything is one-twelfth normal size. After many incidents (mainly getting entangled in [[SillyReasonForWar a holy war over which end to open a hard-boiled egg]]), he escapes on a raft, returning to England. His second voyage takes him to Brobdingnag, where everything is twelve times normal size. Gulliver is kept as a pet by the locals, and has many philosophical conversations with the king of Brobdingnag before being carried off by an eagle, which drops him where he can escape.
9
10On Gulliver's third, and less well-known, voyage, his ship is attacked by {{pirate}}s, but he is rescued by the flying island of Laputa, home to a society of proto-{{TV Genius}}es. After various incidents, including the first description of aerial bombing and a conversation with the ghosts of historical figures, Gulliver returns home via Japan. As mentioned below, a deleted section of this satire attacked the English for their treatment of Ireland, but for the most part it was intended as a scathing condemnation of the nascent European Enlightenment, with the residents of Laputa representing the philosophers, scientists, and academics of his time.
11
12On Gulliver's fourth and final voyage, his crew mutinies. He's marooned on the isle of the Houyhnhnms, where the horses are intelligent (the titular Houyhnhnm) and the humans are brutish, animalistic savages, called Yahoos. Gulliver soon decides the Houyhnhnm are superior to normal humans, who he comes to see as barely any better than the Yahoos. After the Houyhnhnms amicably send him away, Gulliver returns to England where he spends all his time talking to his horses as he finds all humans (including his own family) to be nothing more than Yahoos who happen to wear clothes.
13
14''Gulliver's Travels'' has [[TheFilmOfTheBook been filmed]] several times, but most of the adaptations omit the last two voyages (and aren't too much better with the second - even today, many people don't actually realize there's more to Gulliver's story than just Lilliput). Often, a {{bowdlerise}}d version of the voyage is printed as a children's book. Go [[WesternAnimation/GulliversTravels here]] for the [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1939]] animated film version, [[Film/TheThreeWorldsOfGulliver here]] for the 1960 film with special effects by Creator/RayHarryhausen, and [[Film/GulliversTravels2010 here]] for the 2010 film starring Jack Black. In 1968, Creator/HannaBarbera produced a loosely-inspired animated adaptation ''The Adventures of Gulliver'' about teenaged Gary Gulliver.
15
16In 1996, Hallmark Entertainment and [[Creator/JimHenson Jim Henson Productions]] produced [[Series/GulliversTravels1996 a TV mini-series]] for Creator/{{NBC}} starring Creator/TedDanson, Creator/MarySteenburgen, and a young Creator/TomSturridge. In this version Dr. Gulliver has returned to his family from a long absence. The action shifts back and forth between flashbacks of his travels and the present where he is telling the story of his travels and has been committed to an asylum. It is notable for being one of the very few adaptations to feature all four voyages, and is considered the closest adaptation to the book despite taking several liberties, such as Gulliver not returning home between each part.
17
18And in 2011, Creator/TheBBC produced a SettingUpdate for Radio 4 called ''Brian Gulliver's Travels'', which abandoned the original locations entirely in favour of ones that made satirical points about ''modern'' Britain. Interestingly, it duplicates the FramingStory above of Gulliver describing his stories from a mental institution.
19
20Also, Creator/RobertAHeinlein wrote a scathing satire of the fourth journey in his YA novel ''Literature/StarmanJones'', stating that anyone who would prefer the anti-individualistic lifestyle of the Houyhnhnms over human free will doesn't deserve to be human to begin with. Swift would likely agree, given that the fourth journey was in part a scathing satire of UsefulNotes/TheEnlightenment, which Swift ''loathed''.
21
22Humphry Carpenter made a WholePlotReference to the book in "Literature/MrMajeika on the Internet", which includes modernized parallels to the lands of the Lilliputians, Brobdingnagians, Laputans and Houyhnhnms, as well as a mouse named Gulliver.
23
24The actual story is a staple of the PublicDomain, making it very easy to track down and read.
25
26----
27!!'''This book provides examples of:'''
28%%
29%% Zero Context Examples have been commented out. Please write up an actual example before uncommenting.
30%%
31* AbridgedForChildren: ''Gulliver's Travels'' has appeared in children's abridgements, generally consisting only of the Lilliput and Brobdingnag sections, as tiny and gigantic people were thought to be easier for kids to relate to than scientific frauds, BlessedWithSuck immortals, historical satire and out-and-out misanthropy. The Lilliputian-fire extinguishing scene is always naturally euphemized.
32* AbsentMindedProfessor: Subverted; the Laputans are absent-minded all right, but none of them have any hidden intelligence to speak of.
33* AcquiredErrorAtThePrinter: [[InUniverse According to Gulliver’s letter]], the name of the land of giants is properly “Brobding''r''ag”, but the publishers mistook the second R for an N. All later editions keep the spelling “Brobdingnag” so that his complaint makes sense.
34* AgeWithoutYouth: The Struldbruggs are built around this trope, as they were meant to {{Deconstruct}} the dreams of immortality people had in Swift's time.
35* AllNaturalFireExtinguisher: When the Lilliputians' castle is set alight, Gulliver solves the problem by [[GiantsDropletHumansShower peeing on the fire]]. This extinguishes the fire, but [[ComplainingAboutRescuesTheyDontLike the Empress is too disgusted to be grateful]].
36* AllWomenAreLustful:
37** In Brobdingnag, Gulliver mentions many women liked undressing him and undressing in front of him, as well as doing other things which he hardly describes, but found unpleasant due to GrossUpCloseUp.
38** The men of Laputa are so focused on mathematics and astronomy they probably can't remember women even exist. So whenever a visitor from another country comes up, the women of Laputa rush on the opportunity.
39** In the Houyhnhnm-land Gulliver is almost raped by a Yahoo preteen girl.
40* AlwaysChaoticEvil: The Yahoos. It is noted [[FieryRedhead the red-haired Yahoos take this]] up to eleven.
41* AlwaysLawfulGood: Subverted with the Houyhnhnm, who seem to have an ideal society at first but are really more BitchInSheepsClothing.
42* AmbiguouslyHuman: The Yahoos' origin implies that the whole species are the descendants of a European couple who shipwrecked on Houyhnhnm-Land decades before Gulliver showed up, and just kept breeding and breeding, with [[BrotherSisterIncest each of their children breeding with each other]] and each generation becoming increasingly feral until they were nothing but a race of inbred savages roaming around the island. Which just confirmed Gulliver's belief that HumansAreBastards.
43* AmoralAttorney: Although there are no attorneys in the story, Gulliver's description of the profession to the Houyhnhnms implies that ''all'' lawyers are this.
44* AndIMustScream: Several residents of Luggnagg, notably the Struldbruggs, are born with immortality. However, their bodies never stop aging, most of them living for exceptionally long periods of time without the ability to do anything for themselves. They are unable to stand, walk, they suffer ailments such as losing their hair and eyesight and talking is nearly impossible, if not completely impossible for them. To make matters worse, as soon as they turn 80 years old, despite being immortal, they are considered dead by law and have no legal rights, not even being allowed to be witnesses in court and cannot be employed, buy or own lands, or take leases...
45* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking:
46** Gulliver gives a LongList of various evil things and people that were absent in the country of the Houyhnhnms. After listing "gibers, censurers, backbiters, pickpockets, highwaymen, housebreakers" and "dungeon, axes, gibbets, whipping-posts, or pillories" among other things, he ends with "dancing-masters". (Though many people of Swift’s time [[ValuesDissonance considered dancing just as sinful]].)
47** The title of the third voyage, going through several long and complicated countries' names before ending with Japan. At the time, Japan might have been an imaginary country as far as most ''gaijin'' were concerned: the only foreign presence was a tiny colony of Dutch traders at Nagasaki, with all other nationalities being forbidden from the islands on pain of death.
48* AsimovsThreeKindsOfScienceFiction: Long before Asimov spelled his essay, ''Gulliver's Travels'' was making a satire of the social impacts of the mind-blowing technology that makes FloatingContinent Laputa possible. In the third story about Laputa, its residents are revealed to be pretentious xenophobes that [[FeigningIntelligence Feign Itelligence]], waste money on useless gadgets, and oppress the people outside their city.
49* BilingualBonus: The flying city of ''Laputa'' is a harsh allegory of England and its colonial dominion over Ireland; the name means "the whore" in Spanish.
50* BlackComedy: A specialty of Swift's. See, for example, the horrifically aged Struldbruggs, or the appalling, incestuously inbred Yahoos.
51* TheBodyPartsThatMustNotBeNamed: While Gulliver is not normally shy about discussing naughty things, when he talks about his private parts and not showing them to the Houyhnhnms, he calls them "the parts that nature taught us to conceal".
52* [[{{Bowdlerise}} Bowdlerisation]]: There have been numerous adaptations of the Lilliputian chapters into children's books with all the naughty stuff and political context stripped out. In one version, for instance, instead of peeing on the Empress's palace, he uses an enema syringe.
53* BrotherSisterIncest: See AmbiguouslyHuman.
54* BunglingInventor: Everyone in Balbinarbi is this.
55* CannotTellALie: Gulliver prides himself on his honesty, especially in the face of "dishonest" travelers’ tales.
56* CantArgueWithElves: The Houyhnhnms, and to a lesser extent, the Brobdingnagians, look down on Gulliver's society as pitiful. Arguably a subversion, however, in that neither of these societies is without significant problems obvious to readers (if not to Gulliver himself).
57* CloudCuckooLand: Laputa, the citizens of which devote their lives to math, music, science and philosophy but are utterly ignorant of everyday practicalities.
58* ColonyDrop: A proto-example; the rulers of Laputa threaten to quash resistance in rebellious surface cities by landing their FloatingContinent on them. Actually [[DeconstructedTrope deconstructed,]] since such measures are almost never used, because they are liable to seriously harm or even destroy Laputa itself; in one case, the Laputans had to agree to the demands of a rebellious city whose inhabitants turned out to have a way of turning the landing into a crash.
59* ColossusClimb: The Lilliputians on Gulliver; later Gulliver on the Brobdingnagians.
60* ComplainingAboutRescuesTheyDontLike:
61** When the Empress's apartment is on fire, Gulliver saves her [[ToiletHumor by urinating on it.]] The Empress, in response, refuses to live there again.
62** Gulliver himself when he is rescued at the end of the book by the Portuguese captain. He wanted to stay a hermit on some island, and detested being taken back home again.
63* DecadentCourt: Lilliput. The treasurer and general have the king wrapped around their fingers, and people are elected based off how well they do at limbo and tight-rope walking.
64* DiligentDraftAnimal: Discussed, the titular character spends a lot of time espousing the virtues of the Houyhnhnms, including their industriousness. They, themselves, use feral humans as beasts of labor, but lately have been leaning toward exterminating the highly problematic animals and replacing them with the much more practical donkeys.
65* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything:
66** Among [[BlatantLies the oh-so perfect and virtuous Houyhnhnms]], it is taken for granted that the ones with [[PersecutionFlip lighter coat colors]] are physically and mentally inferior to the darker ones, and doomed to being a ServantRace, in return for less strict PopulationControl standards. Does double duty as a slavery ''and'' as an aristocracy metaphor.
67** [[VillainousIncest The origin of the Yahoos]] is a parallel to [[Literature/TheBible Adam and Eve]], whose children mated with each other out of necessity, and grew more and more wicked. No wonder Gulliver ends up a MisanthropeSupreme after hearing about it.
68* DownerEnding: Gulliver loses faith in the human race and becomes a misanthrope. He can't even stand to be around his own family.
69* TheEveryman: While a learned man and a surgeon, Gulliver is otherwise this.
70* FanDisservice: An encounter with some of the young ladies of Brobdingnag has probably turned Gulliver off breasts for life, as every single imperfection in the skin texture is [[GrossUpCloseUp magnified to the same degree]].
71* FishOutOfWater: Gulliver everywhere, even in England after each voyage.
72* FloatingContinent: Laputa is probably the TropeMaker. It utilizes a giant magnet which pushes towards/against the earth depending on which pole is pointing downwards. Strangely enough, it's the only one of their inventions that works.
73* ForScience: Seems to be the main motivation in the Academy of Lagado, whose half-baked ideas range from extracting sunbeams from cucumbers[[note]]okay... Plants use sunlight to split carbon from carbon dioxide, and excrete the dioxide (02, aka breathable oxygen). Applying heat catalyzes the release of the stored solar energy as light and heat, leaving the carbon as ash. One way this can actually be done, besides setting it on fire, is by pickling the cucumber and running an electric current through it, turning it into an odorous LED until it cooks. Not that anyone in Swift’s time had a clue about this chemistry, of course.[[/note]] to [[BodyHorror turning a dog inside out]] to cure its diarrhea.
74* FormerlySapientSpecies: The Yahoos are inbred descendants of a stranded human couple without any signs of sapience.
75* FramingDevice: The novel opens with a letter ostensibly written by Gulliver to his "cousin Sympson" in which he complains that the story of his travels as it has been printed contains numerous misprintings and factual errors, and bemoans the fact that it has as yet produced no noticeable improvement in the moral character of the human race, on account of which Gulliver has resolved to stop writing. This is followed by a short note from Sympson to the readers in which he explains that certain duller passages were removed so as not to bore the reader and expresses his hope that they will enjoy the story anyway.
76* FromBadToWorse: The causes of Gulliver's (mis)adventures gets worse with each part of the book. In the first part, he gets shipwrecked. In the second, he gets abandoned. In the third, he gets attacked by pirates. In the fourth, his own crew mutinies against him.
77* GiantsDropletHumansShower: As with the ComplainingAboutRescuesTheyDontLike example above, Gulliver urinates on the Lilliputians' palace to extinguish the fire in the Empress's apartment. Though he succeeds, the Empress is less than pleased, not to mention disgusted.
78* GoingNative: By the end of his journey, Gulliver considers the Houyhnhnms superior and starts calling himself a Yahoo. He seems prone to this, considering how quickly he acclimated to Lilliput and Brobdingnag and how much trouble he'd already had adjusting to normal after those two adventures.
79* GulliverTieDown: The TropeNamer event occurs in Lilliput.
80* HandyFeet: The Houyhnhnms have them out of necessity:
81-->The Houyhnhnms use the hollow part, between the pastern and the hoof of their fore-foot, as we do our hands, and this with greater dexterity than I could at first imagine. I have seen a white mare of our family thread a needle (which I lent her on purpose) with that joint.
82* HobblingTheGiant: The six-inch tall Lilliputians attempt to restrain Gulliver by binding his arms and legs to keep him immobile. However, the restraints they use aren't nearly strong enough against Gulliver's full-size strength.
83* HiddenElfVillage: Brobdingnag and Houyhnhnm-Land, in contrast to Lilliput and Laputa; since the latter two countries are exposed to other nations, they can start wars with them almost automatically.
84* HumansAreBastards: By the end of the book, Gulliver is fully convinced every human being on Earth is a filthy, savage Yahoo, including himself.
85* IfYoureSoEvilEatThisKitten: Weary of his disappointing time in Luggnagg, Gulliver is finally able to secure passage on a boat bound for Japan, and he arrives at the port of Xamoschi on 21 March 1710. His stay in the island country is brief, however, as he finds himself in trouble once again. It seems the custom for Dutchmen in Japan is to trample the crucifix, in order to demonstrate that they are not Christians, and none have ever refused to do so. The Japanese Emperor excuses Gulliver from this tradition, but later, a Dutchman again tries to force Gulliver into trampling the cross, a sacrilegious act in his eyes. (This was an actual thing isolationist Japan did, called the ''fumi-e''.)
86* IncredibleShrinkingMan: Gulliver in Brobdingnag, a country of giants.
87* IntellectualAnimal: The Houyhnhnms (again) are highly intelligent, thoughtful horses.
88* InWhichATropeIsDescribed: Every chapter begins with these descriptions.
89* ItRunsOnNonsensoleum: The inventions in the academy of Balnibarbi are so ridiculous they fall under this category, satirizing the "scientific advancements" of Swift's time.
90* KnowNothingKnowItAll: The Laputans are [[PlanetOfHats an entire flying country of]] Know-Nothing-Know-It-Alls. They devote their entire lives to math, music, philosophy, astronomy, and politics, failing at each one spectacularly.
91* LanguageEqualsThought: The Houyhnhnms, lacking many common human vices, have no words for them in their language and have to resort to roundabout euphemisms to describe them, e.g. "to lie" becomes "to say a thing which is not".
92* LargeRunt: The court dwarf in Brobdingnag is stated to be the shortest local ever... at under thirty feet. For the locals, it's the same as a person below thirty inches for us, for Gulliver, that means a person who was looked down upon (literally) his entire life now has someone to take his frustration upon.
93* LastNameBasis: Gulliver. Due to the book being written in first person and mostly known to modern audiences through PopCultureOsmosis, many people aren't aware he even ''has'' a first name. It's Lemuel.
94* LegallyDead: In order to prevent the Struldbruggs from concentrating all wealth in their hands, they are made that at the age of eighty.
95* {{Lilliputians}}: The TropeNamer. The original Lilliputians are the little people in this story, who live in Lilliput.
96* UsefulNotes/TheLongitudeProblem: On the one hand, Gulliver carefully reports both the latitude and longitude of all the various fictional places he visits. On the other, when he's in Laputa fantasizing about what he could do if he were immortal, one of the problems he imagines being able to solve is "the discovery of the longitude". The effect is to create the impression that either Gulliver or Swift himself isn't entirely clear on what "the discovery of longitudes" actually means.[[note]]Finding the longitude of a stationary location like an island is relatively easy, if tedious; Swift probably meant a method for ascertaining the longitude of a ship under way, which nobody knew how to do at the time (the first practical method was invented a couple of decades after his death.)[[/note]]
97* MeaningfulName: [[BilingualBonus La Puta]]. Also Lindalino, which is a pun on Swift's [[UsefulNotes/{{Dublin}} hometown]] - it has [[IncrediblyLamePun double 'lin's']]. Get it?
98* MonkeysOnATypewriter: One of the absurd inventions created by the [[CloudCuckoolander Laputan]] [[TVGenius intellectuals]] is a device for randomly combining words so that "the most ignorant person, at a reasonable charge, and with a little bodily labour, might write books in philosophy, poetry, politics, laws, mathematics, and theology, without the least assistance from genius or study".
99* TheMutiny: That's how the fourth adventure starts. Lemuel, as a captain, loses some of his crew to diseases, and hires some men who are down on their luck. Eventually, he gets enough for them to subvert the rest of the crew and take over.
100* {{Neologism}}: The origin of the words "yahoo", "lilliputian", and "brobdingnagian".
101* NobodyPoops: Averted with a vengeance. Along with the examples listed elsewhere on this page, while in Lilliput, a couple of luckless locals get stuck with the job of carting off Gulliver's solid waste every day.
102* {{Omniglot}}: Gulliver learns the languages of the places he visits with remarkable (and convenient) speed. Most adaptations have everyone speak English from the start.
103* OnlySaneMan: Lord Munodi, Gulliver's Balnibarbian host who, in contrast to the rest of the Laputan nobility, lives on the land below and administers his estates competently.
104* OutsideContextProblem: Gulliver, in Lilliput and Houyhnhnm-Land. In Brobdingnag, the scientists are baffled at him, although they are careful to phrase it in a more technobabbly way.
105* {{Parody}}: Of the now mostly-forgotten genre of "traveler's tales", of which Daniel Defoe's ''Literature/RobinsonCrusoe'' is the most famous example today.
106* PerfectPacifistPeople: The Houyhnhnms (a race of sapient horses) at first appears to be this trope, [[SubvertedTrope until they get the bright idea of driving the Yahoos to extinction via castration.]]
107* PersecutionFlip: The Houyhnhnms are horses in charge of [[FormerlySapientSpecies humans inbred into mindless beasts]], and have a strict caste system with the darker colors in charge.
108* PersonOfMassDestruction: Gulliver becomes this in Lilliput, in which the inhabitants attempt to use him as a superweapon in their war against their bitter rival Blefuscu.
109* PlanetOfHats: All the countries Gulliver visits tend to embody a single mindset or habit of thought, in order to satirise it.
110** In Lilliput, everyone is a petty-minded, minuscule warmonger who believes in cracking boiled eggs on the little end. Blefuscu is the same, except they believe eggs should be cracked on the ''big'' end.
111** In Brobdingnag, everyone is a giant, and seems to be generally good-hearted but judgmental.
112** In Laputa, everyone is a KnowNothingKnowItAll; in Balnibarbi everyone is a crackpot inventor; and in Glubdubdrib everyone is a necromancer.
113** In Houyhnhnmland, all Houyhnhnms are [[IntellectualAnimal Intellectual Animals]] (even the servant race), and the Yahoos are AlwaysChaoticEvil ([[FieryRedhead redheads even more so]]).
114* PottyEmergency: A strange case occurs in Lilliput. Gulliver awakens after a hard evening of drinking to discover two things: The Palace is on fire (the emergency) and his bladder is full (the potty). So he combines the two and takes a leak on the palace to put out the fire.
115* RecursiveReality: The first part features Gulliver going to an island of tiny people and the second part features him going to an island of giant people who are as big to him as he was to the Lilliputians.
116* RoyalDecree: The conditions the Lilliputian king gives Gulliver for his freedom.
117* Rule34: There is an erotic comic book adaptation by Creator/MiloManara (same guy who wrote "ComicBook/XWomen"), with a woman in Gulliver's place. The original method of extinguishing the fire in Lilliput is retained...
118* SacredScripture: The Lilliputians have "the Blundecral (which is their [[Literature/TheQuran Alcoran]])."
119* {{Satire}}: The book is considered by many people the greatest work of Juvenalian satire in the English language.
120* ScienceIsBad: Balnibarbi. Mostly because none of their inventions are practical or even make sense and end up just ruining the environment.
121* {{Scienceville}}: Parodied and played for laughs the case of Laputa, a FloatingContinent dominated by wildly eccentric, hopelessly-impractical scientists - created as satires of Britain's Royal Society. As a whole, their inventions are almost invariably useless, pointless, or just plain nonsensical. Their one big success lies in the artificial magnetism their city uses to fly, which allows them to dominate the land below: if anyone rebels, they can either hover in place above them and blot out the sun, drop boulders from on high, or - in extreme cases - land Laputa right on top of them. In keeping with the AwesomeButImpractical nature of the place, this doesn't always work out for them.
122* SeriousBusiness: The Lilliputians are at war... over which end of an egg to break open. This was meant to satirize religious disputes over seemingly petty differences like the Doctrine of Transubstantiation, which had caused (and continued to cause) vast amounts of war and bloodshed in Swift's day.
123* ShipwreckStart: Gulliver being shipwrecked is how he starts the story in the land of Lilliput.
124* SignificantAnagram:
125** Many critics have pointed out that the Lilliputian capital "Mildendo" is an anagram of "dildo men."
126** Swift's description of the Conversational Machine in the third voyage hints that it is actually a complex cryptogram, which some people since claim they have cracked. This was apparently the reason Swift was so upset when a few letters in his made up words were altered for the original printing.
127** "...in the kingdom of [[UsefulNotes/{{Britain}} Tribnia]], by the natives called Langdon (most commonly assumed to be a misspelled anagram of UsefulNotes/{{England}}) ... the bulk of the people consist in a manner wholly of discoverers, witnesses, informers, accusers, prosecutors, evidences, swearers, together with their several subservient and subaltern instruments..."
128* SillyReasonForWar: The Little-Endians (Lillput) and the Big-Endians (Blefuscu) are at war over which end one should crack a boiled egg on. Like everything else in the book, it's a political allegory for Protestant-Catholic wars between England and France.
129* SoleSurvivor: Gulliver is the only survivor of the shipwreck in the first voyage.
130* SpiritualAntithesis: The second part is this to the first part. Lilliput is a land of tiny militant people who go to war for the silliest reasons, while Brobdingnag is a country of giants who are much more peaceful and enlightened.
131* SpoilerTitle: The chapter titles tend to give away everything that happens in said chapter.
132* SterilityPlague: The Houyhnhnms decide the best way of wiping out the Yahoos is to castrate them all. They got the inspiration for this from Gulliver's description of how horses are treated in England (male horses were castrated to break their spirits and control the population).
133* StrawVulcan: The Houyhnhnms, who use logic to dictate everything and look down on one when it forms an emotional bond with Gulliver.
134* SuperiorSpecies: The Houyhnhnms are considered this by Gulliver and themselves (the word "Houyhnhnm" in their language even means "perfection of nature").
135* ToiletHumor: In addition to all the high-minded satire, the book has plenty of this as well, Gulliver putting out the Lilliputian castle fire by pissing on it, [[FanDisservice the lengthy descriptions of Brobdingnagian breasts]], Gulliver getting covered in Yahoo feces.
136* {{Tomorrowland}}: In his third voyage, Gulliver visits Laputa: a flying city powered by magnetic levitation. Laputa's population consists mainly of an educated elite, who are fond of mathematics, astronomy, music and technology, but fail to make practical use of their knowledge. Servants make up the rest of the population. Gulliver's visit occurs in 1706.
137* UnifiedNamingSystem: There are the Big Endians and the Little Endians. Which actually refers to the reason for the conflict: [[SillyReasonForWar how to eat eggs]].
138* UnreliableNarrator: Gulliver goes on and on about how the Houyhnhnms are the most magnificent creatures to walk God's green earth, despite their willingness to exterminate other species. Meanwhile, people like his own family and the Portuguese captain who show him nothing but kindness are disgusting, sinful monsters.
139* WhoWantsToLiveForever: The Struldbruggs, who [[AgeWithoutYouth just get more senile and decrepit as they age]].
140* WillNotTellALie: The Houyhnhnms are fully capable of saying basic lies like "Black is white", but they cannot comprehend the ''point'' of using speech for miscommunication rather than communication.
141* YouAreACreditToYourRace: Gulliver considers the Portuguese captain who rescued him as this, as well as the English Queen Anne whom Swift was fond of.
142* {{Zeerust}}: Laputa is very much what a pre-industrial society would think advanced technology is like. None of the inventions make a lick of sense, though that is intentional on Swift’s part.

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