Across
- 2. Gulliver's job
- 7. Swift was an_ clergyman who eventually became Dean of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin.
- 9. the voyage to Lilliput can be read as a satire on _ politics of the time.
- 10. Gulliver’s Travels was first _ in 1726
- 12. Gulliver's first name
- 14. the supposed cousin of the character of
- 15. the character of Gulliver becomes a maddened_, a word meaning he has a hatred for humanity.
- 16. it was important to the book’s effect that it be a kind of highly elaborate _.
- 18. _ published the book without knowing for sure who had written it.
- 20. Jonathan Swift would officially claim it as his own nearly a _ later.
Down
- 1. the genre of narrative or literature mocked by Gulliver's Travels
- 3. Lilliput could also be a parody of doctrinal disputes between _ and Protestants
- 4. Jonathan Swift, arranged for the _ of half the book to be dropped off in secret.
- 5. the book is an example of this genre of writing as it uses parody to mock another genre
- 6. the number of journeys contained in the book
- 8. Jonathan Swift initially did his best to _ the fact that he was the author of Gulliver's Travels.
- 11. The persona of Gulliver is created because it is based on _ and truthfulness
- 13. The character of Gulliver is an example of an _ narrator, because we cannot rely on his version of events.
- 17. the fictitious lands that Gulliver explores on his voyages were depicted at the fringes of the known world; for example, one of his voyages took him off the coast of what is now known as _.
- 19. Swift’s satirical creations were published anonymously or under a _.
