


East India Co's sales

East India porcelain

Queen's Royal Cookery

Cabinet of curiosities

Sugar in Britain

Bartholomew Fair

Gulliver's Travels

Executions at Tyburn

Textile production

Cities in chaos

East India textiles

The Harlot’s Progress

Handel's Messiah

Advert for a giant

Surgery

Muffin Seller

JS Bach manuscript

The Art of Cookery

Henry Fielding: Crime

Gin addiction

Johnson's Dictionary

'The British Giant'

Jigsaw Puzzle Map

The Spinning Jenny

Pleasure gardens

Factories

London prostitutes

Captain Cook's journal

Declaration of Independence

Map of the Gordon Riots

Storming of the Bastille

Runaway slaves

First curry powder advert

First hot air balloon

Abolitionist meeting notes

Georgian Theatre

Mozart’s notebook

Poverty

Thomas Paine's Rights of Man

Mary Wollstonecraft

Execution of Louis XVI

William Blake's Notebook
In 1726, the poet, clergyman and satirist Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) published Gulliver's Travels - a satire on the society of the day and a warning about human folly. Gulliver's Travels comprises four books. In each Lemuel Gulliver embarks on a voyage and is cast upon a strange land.
In the first book he becomes the giant prisoner of the six inch high Lilliputians. In the second he arrives in Brobdingnag - a land of giants. Book three takes Gulliver to Laputa, a floating island whose inhabitants are so preoccupied with higher speculations that they are in constant danger of collision. In book four, Gulliver travels to the utopian island of the Houyhnhnms; grave and rational horses devoid of any passion, even sexual desire. The island is also inhabited by Yahoos - vicious and repulsive creatures used by the Houyhnhnms for menial work. Gulliver initially pretends not to recognize the Yahoos, but eventually admits that they are human beings.
Gulliver himself, and each of the populations encountered by him, can be identified with distinct aspects of contemporary society and human nature.
Shelfmark: 012614.a.52