Voyages du Capitaine Lemuel Gulliver, En Divers Pays Eloignes, Tome II de III

audiobook

Voyages du Capitaine Lemuel Gulliver, En Divers Pays Eloignes, Tome II de III

by Jonathan Swift

FR·~5 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total

TOME SECOND.

0:15

TABLE - DES CHAPITRES - du voyage de Laputa, Balnibarbi, &c.

2:07

TABLE - DES CHAPITRES - du Voyage au Pays des Houyhnhnms.

3:33

CHAPITRE I.

12:44

CHAPITRE II.

18:17

CHAPITRE III.

11:23

CHAPITRE IV.

14:11

CHAPITRE V.

17:09

CHAPITRE VI.

12:37

CHAPITRE VII.

9:07

Description

The narrative resumes with the captain’s third expedition, which begins in turmoil when a band of pirates seizes his ship and strands him on a remote island. There he discovers Laputa, a floating realm suspended above the sea, where scholars devote themselves to abstract mathematics and astronomy while the monarch strives to keep dissent at bay. From this aerial citadel he is whisked down to the earthy province of Balnibarbi, where the grand Academy of Lagado dazzles with outlandish inventions and experiments that both astonish and confound its visitors.

Continuing his wanderings, the traveler ventures to the mystical courts of Glubbdubdrib and the austere kingdom of Luggnagg, meeting curious officials and hearing legends of the ageless Struldbrugs. His journey then leads him to a land inhabited by the rational, horse‑like Houyhnhnms, whose orderly society starkly contrasts with the brutish, uncivilized Yahoos that roam nearby. Through vivid descriptions and witty observations, the tale invites listeners to reflect on the peculiar customs and philosophies of each extraordinary realm.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~5 hours (309K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Mohammad Aboomar for the QuantiQual Project; Project ID: COALESCE/2017/117 (Irish Research Council)

Release date

2020-04-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift

1667–1745

Best known for Gulliver’s Travels and the razor-sharp satire of A Modest Proposal, this Anglo-Irish writer used wit to expose political folly, social cruelty, and human vanity. He was also a churchman, and that mix of moral seriousness and comic bite gives his work its lasting force.

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