In Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, how does Gulliver reach the island of Lilliput? Where is he housed there?
Gulliver arrived in Lilliput after his ship crashed into a big rock and split. After the ship sank, he and a few companions rowed away in a life boat, but they became exhausted with rowing and had to give themselves over to the waves. A storm eventually overtook them, and Gulliver had to swim for it. He assumes that his compatriots from the life boat were all lost at sea.
After he is brought into the town by the Lilliputians, he is housed in an old temple, a very large one, that had been "polluted" when a murder took place there some years before. As a result, it fell into disuse and was now emptied of its contents so that it could accommodate Gulliver's large size. The doorway was big enough that he could crawl through it, and he was chained and padlocked within so that he could be kept isolated.
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