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Title
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[a group of female immortals from Luggnag]
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Description
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This image depicts a group of female immortals from Luggnagg. Gulliver describes the women as looking more horrifying than did the male immortals. Gulliver says it was easy to pick out the oldest immortal of the group, as they became ghastlier as the years went on. Like their male counterparts, the female immortals act like mortals until about the age of thirty, and then become very melancholy until about eighty years old. At this time, they recon themselves with the reality of never dying. The diplomat also says that the immortals often become opinionative, peevish, morose, vain, covetous, talkative, and incapable of friendship. Furthermore, they lose all ability for affection, even for their descendants. Their primary characteristics become impotent desires and envy. They cannot experience pleasure, and when they attend a funeral, they find themselves envious of others who could die. Their memories also begin to fade. In this image we see a group of these immortal men looking angry and discontent. They are identified by the large spot on their forehead above their left eyebrow. The same image appears in the 1843 Krabbe edition.
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Image Creator
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Grandville (Illustrator);Dreigne Sculpt (Illustrator)
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Grandville (Illustrator)
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Dreigne Sculpt (Illustrator)
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Identifier
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mta:21131
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Source Name
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Gulliver's Reisen in unbekannte Länder
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Image
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mta_21131_OBJ.png
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Subject
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Immortality
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Immortality in literature
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fictional works
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imaginary places
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Fictitious characters
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imaginary creatures