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In the book ___ the king Brobdingnag observes that most men are not morally suitable for their jobs

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The answer to your question is Gulliver's Travels
User JasonS
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Answer:

In the book Gulliver's Travels the king Brobdingnag observes that most men are not morally suitable for their jobs

Step-by-step explanation:

In this book, it is implied that the King of Brobdingnag has strong feelings about the morals of the english people, in a conversation with Gulliver when the latter tells him stories of battles between the monarchy, nobility, and people in civil wars that take place and end up in a treaty. The king then states: "the most pernicious race of little odious vermin that nature ever suffered to crawl upon the surface of the earth" taking a distance contrasting the english with the believes he has from his own people.

User Travis B
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