What is Gulliver's opinion of Captain Pocock? Is he himself any different from the captain?
We've reached part 4, chapter 1 of the story, and our hero is off on his travels once more. Gulliver has spent five relaxing months at home with his pregnant wife, but his wanderlust soon gets the better of him, and so he embarks upon another thrilling voyage into strange new worlds. Gulliver becomes captain of the appropriately-named Adventurer, a stout merchant ship weighing in at around 350 tons.
A week after setting sail from Portsmouth, Gulliver meets up with a Captain Pocock in Tenerife, in Spain. He clearly holds Pocock in high regard, albeit with some reservations. Pocock is an honest man and a good sailor, but he comes across as a tad stubborn, a little too set in his ways.
Gulliver later hears that, after he and Pocock were parted by a storm, Pocock's ship floundered at sea, with the loss of all hands on board except a single cabin boy. Gulliver suggests that if Pocock had followed his advice, then this tragedy might well have been avoided.
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