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Gulliver’s perspective on this second voyage will be extremely different. Where Lilliput shocked him with its tininess, he is now amazed by this new land’s immensity. Note that Swift’s prose keeps pace with Gulliver’s own perspective: he does not yet know the name of the creature and so he just refers to it as a “monster.” Swift’s prose continues to match up with Gulliver’s perspective. Gulliver’s reflection emphasizes an absence of absolute truth: everything is dependent on comparison, that is, perspective. From the giant’s perspective, Gulliver is simply a tiny animal and his riches are worthless. The worldly knowledge Gulliver acquired from his adventures in Lilliput enables him to recognize and empathize with the giants’ perspective. Still, Gulliver falsely assumes that the giants will choose to exert their physical power. In fact, they seem eager to privilege moral power and treat Gulliver humanely, just as the "giant" Gulliver treated the Lilliputians. A meal’s worth of food from Gulliver’s perspective is a mere crumb from the giant’s viewpoint. Gulliver affirms his own desire to privilege moral power (and forgiveness) over physical power by kissing the son. At the same time, he supplicates himself to the farmer’s power by referring to him as “master.” Again, Gulliver’s worldly knowledge (of the Lilliputians) helps him make sense of his new experience. Gulliver’s perspective is as different from the giants’ as the Lilliputians’ perspective was from his in Lilliput: things that are harmless or small nuisances to the giants (pets, babies, vermin) are huge dangers for Gulliver. Gulliver once again includes details about his excrement. For him, this inclusion is proof of moral power, a testament to the honesty and usefulness of his account. The uncensored truthfulness will make his adventures more imaginable to readers, which will thereby make its lessons more applicable to English lives.