PART II.  A VOYAGE TO BROBDINGNAG.
3. CHAPTER III.
 (continued)
I remember, one morning, when Glumdalclitch had set me in a box
 upon a window, as she usually did in fair days to give me air (for
 I durst not venture to let the box be hung on a nail out of the
 window, as we do with cages in England), after I had lifted up one
 of my sashes, and sat down at my table to eat a piece of sweet cake
 for my breakfast, above twenty wasps, allured by the smell, came
 flying into the room, humming louder than the drones of as many
 bagpipes.  Some of them seized my cake, and carried it piecemeal
 away; others flew about my head and face, confounding me with the
 noise, and putting me in the utmost terror of their stings.
 However, I had the courage to rise and draw my hanger, and attack
 them in the air.  I dispatched four of them, but the rest got away,
 and I presently shut my window.  These insects were as large as
 partridges:  I took out their stings, found them an inch and a half
 long, and as sharp as needles.  I carefully preserved them all; and
 having since shown them, with some other curiosities, in several
 parts of Europe, upon my return to England I gave three of them to
 Gresham College, and kept the fourth for myself. 
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