The king of Luggnagg likes Gulliver.
The king of Luggnagg initially shows curiosity and interest in Gulliver due to his strange appearance and stories. However, as Gulliver spends more time in Luggnagg, the king becomes disillusioned with him and eventually sees him as a fraud and deceitful.
Gulliver wanted to go to Luggnagg to see the people who had the ability to live forever and receive the salutation of "yan" or "struldbrugs". They were of great interest to him as he wanted to learn more about their immortality.
The Japanese magistrates become more respectful towards Gulliver and permit him to stay in Nagasaki, although under close watch as a suspected criminal. They allow him a degree of freedom but do not fully trust him due to the nature of his arrival.
In Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travels," Lemuel Gulliver visits the floating island of Laputa after being shipwrecked while sailing from the east Indies to the Dutch port of Luggnagg. He is rescued by the Laputians, who take him to their island.
Lemuel Gulliver, in Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift. After Lilliput (tiny people) he went to Brobdingnag (giants), Laputa, Balnibarbi, Luggnagg, Glubbdubdrib, Japan, and the land of the Houyhnhnms.
The king of the Lilliputians in Gulliver's Travels is named King Liliput.
Gulliver promises the king that he will serve him faithfully and help him in his war against the enemy.
In "Gulliver's Travels," Gulliver describes gunpowder and firearms to the king of Brobdingnag as advanced human military technology. The king is shocked by the destructive potential of these weapons and warns Gulliver against the dangers of such advancements.
The king of Laputa asks Gulliver about the government, customs, and institutions of England. He is particularly interested in learning about Gulliver's perspective on war and politics in England.
how does the japanese captain king toward gulliver
Yes, in "Gulliver's Travels," Gulliver's actions such as extinguishing a fire in Blefuscu by urinating on it made the king of Blefuscu irate. This ultimately led to a war between the two nations.
In Jonathan Swift's, Gulliver's Travels Gulliver travels to Luggnag, a country which trades with Japan, and where the King of Luggnag acts as Gulliver's host and invites Gulliver to stay permanently, but he refuses.
If this is reference to Gulliver's travels, the lilliputian king is angered with Gulliver because he had the lilliputian scientists make gunpowder, which blew up one of the tables.