| PART II.  A VOYAGE TO BROBDINGNAG.
7. CHAPTER VII.
 [The author's love of his country.  He makes a proposal of much
 advantage to the king, which is rejected.  The king's great
 ignorance in politics.  The learning of that country very imperfect
 and confined.  The laws, and military affairs, and parties in the
 state.] Nothing but an extreme love of truth could have hindered me from
 concealing this part of my story.  It was in vain to discover my
 resentments, which were always turned into ridicule; and I was
 forced to rest with patience, while my noble and beloved country
 was so injuriously treated.  I am as heartily sorry as any of my
 readers can possibly be, that such an occasion was given:  but this
 prince happened to be so curious and inquisitive upon every
 particular, that it could not consist either with gratitude or good
 manners, to refuse giving him what satisfaction I was able.  Yet
 thus much I may be allowed to say in my own vindication, that I
 artfully eluded many of his questions, and gave to every point a
 more favourable turn, by many degrees, than the strictness of truth
 would allow.  For I have always borne that laudable partiality to
 my own country, which Dionysius Halicarnassensis, with so much
 justice, recommends to an historian:  I would hide the frailties
 and deformities of my political mother, and place her virtues and
 beauties in the most advantageous light.  This was my sincere
 endeavour in those many discourses I had with that monarch,
 although it unfortunately failed of success. But great allowances should be given to a king, who lives wholly
 secluded from the rest of the world, and must therefore be
 altogether unacquainted with the manners and customs that most
 prevail in other nations:  the want of which knowledge will ever
 produce many prejudices, and a certain narrowness of thinking, from
 which we, and the politer countries of Europe, are wholly exempted.
 And it would be hard indeed, if so remote a prince's notions of
 virtue and vice were to be offered as a standard for all mankind. |