A Voyage to Brobdingnag

A Voyage to Brobdingnag

Title: A Voyage to Brobdingnag
Author: Jonathan Swift
Release: 2025-03-15
Kind: audiobook
Genre: Fiction
Preview Intro
1
A Voyage to Brobdingnag Jonathan Swift
After staying in England with his wife and family for two months, Gulliver undertakes his next sea voyage, which takes him to a land of giants called Brobdingnag. Here, a field worker discovers him. The farmer initially treats him as little more than an animal, keeping him for amusement. The farmer eventually sells Gulliver to the queen, who makes him a courtly diversion and is entertained by his musical talents. Social life is easy for Gulliver after his discovery by the court, but not particularly enjoyable. Gulliver is often repulsed by the physicality of the Brobdingnagians, whose ordinary flaws are many times magnified by their huge size.

More from Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift & Martin Woodside
Jonathan Swift
Robert Burns, Jane Barker, Andrew Marvell, Aphra Behn, Daniel Sheehan, Edward Thomas, Jonathan Swift, Katherine Philips, Rumi, Rupert Brooke & William Blake
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift, Oscar Wilde & Robert Burns
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift, William Butler Yeats, Alfred Austin & Charles Swinburne
Jonathan Swift & Janice Greene
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift & Clare West
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Christina Rossetti, Lucretia Maria Davidson, Lord Byron, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, William Ross Wallace, Jonathan Swift, Edmund Waller, James Russell Lowell, Henry Baker, Jane Austen, Martin Farquhar Tupper & John Milton
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
John Clare, Hafiz, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Robert Browning, Christina Georgina Rossetti, William Shakespeare, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rainer Maria Rilke, William Wordsworth, Jonathan Swift, Wilfred Owen, Emily Dickinson & A. E. Housman
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
Michel de Montaigne, Jonathan Swift, Joseph Addison, Samuel Johnson & Thomas Carlyle