Lilliputians
The Lilliputians symbolize humankind's wildly excessive
pride in its own puny existence. Swift fully intends the irony of
representing the tiniest race visited by Gulliver as by far the
most vainglorious and smug, both collectively and individually.
There is surely no character more odious in all of Gulliver's travels
than the noxious Skyresh. There is more backbiting and conspiracy
in Lilliput than anywhere else, and more of the pettiness of small
minds who imagine themselves to be grand. Gulliver is a naïve consumer
of the Lilliputians' grandiose imaginings: he is flattered by the
attention of their royal family and cowed by their threats of punishment,
forgetting that they have no real physical power over him. Their
formally worded condemnation of Gulliver on grounds of treason is
a model of pompous and self-important verbiage, but it works quite
effectively on the naïve Gulliver.
The Lilliputians show off not only to Gulliver but to
themselves as well. There is no mention of armies proudly marching
in any of the other societies Gulliver visitsonly in Lilliput and
neighboring Blefuscu are the six-inch inhabitants possessed of the
need to show off their patriotic glories with such displays. When
the Lilliputian emperor requests that Gulliver serve as a kind of
makeshift Arch of Triumph for the troops to pass under, it is a
pathetic reminder that their grand paradein full view of Gulliver's
nether regionsis supremely silly, a basically absurd way to boost
the collective ego of the nation. Indeed, the war with Blefuscu
is itself an absurdity springing from wounded vanity, since the
cause is not a material concern like disputed territory but, rather,
the proper interpretation of scripture by the emperor's forebears
and the hurt feelings resulting from the disagreement. All in all,
the Lilliputians symbolize misplaced human pride, and point out
Gulliver's inability to diagnose it correctly.