PART II.  A VOYAGE TO BROBDINGNAG.
8. CHAPTER VIII.
 
[The king and queen make a progress to the frontiers.  The author
 attends them.  The manner in which he leaves the country very
 particularly related.  He returns to England.] 
I had always a strong impulse that I should some time recover my
 liberty, though it was impossible to conjecture by what means, or
 to form any project with the least hope of succeeding.  The ship in
 which I sailed, was the first ever known to be driven within sight
 of that coast, and the king had given strict orders, that if at any
 time another appeared, it should be taken ashore, and with all its
 crew and passengers brought in a tumbril to Lorbrulgrud.  He was
 strongly bent to get me a woman of my own size, by whom I might
 propagate the breed:  but I think I should rather have died than
 undergone the disgrace of leaving a posterity to be kept in cages,
 like tame canary-birds, and perhaps, in time, sold about the
 kingdom, to persons of quality, for curiosities.  I was indeed
 treated with much kindness:  I was the favourite of a great king
 and queen, and the delight of the whole court; but it was upon such
 a foot as ill became the dignity of humankind.  I could never
 forget those domestic pledges I had left behind me.  I wanted to be
 among people, with whom I could converse upon even terms, and walk
 about the streets and fields without being afraid of being trod to
 death like a frog or a young puppy.  But my deliverance came sooner
 than I expected, and in a manner not very common; the whole story
 and circumstances of which I shall faithfully relate. 
I had now been two years in this country; and about the beginning
 of the third, Glumdalclitch and I attended the king and queen, in a
 progress to the south coast of the kingdom.  I was carried, as
 usual, in my travelling-box, which as I have already described, was
 a very convenient closet, of twelve feet wide.  And I had ordered a
 hammock to be fixed, by silken ropes from the four corners at the
 top, to break the jolts, when a servant carried me before him on
 horseback, as I sometimes desired; and would often sleep in my
 hammock, while we were upon the road.  On the roof of my closet,
 not directly over the middle of the hammock, I ordered the joiner
 to cut out a hole of a foot square, to give me air in hot weather,
 as I slept; which hole I shut at pleasure with a board that drew
 backward and forward through a groove. 
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