Oh my lord almost the entire thing is a series of devises, especially irony.
A very obvious example you'd be advised not to use: the irony of Romeo's sacrifice, drinking the poison to be with his love, only to be the cause of her demise. Very poetic.
Another example of irony: The Montague's and Capulet's determination to keep their children safe from the other family, only to drive them both to their graves through increasingly hateful acts.
Honestly the entire story is riddled with irony. Pick a situation where a character makes a choose that ends up doing the oppositite of what they intended.
Your answer is:
No.
The Iilliputians are very "large" and powerful in this story! They even imprisonate big, strong Gulliver! Swift presents a sort of oxymoron in this story as the Iilliputians are physically pint-sized but mentally gigantic!
Hope this helps!
B. dangers of disobedience.
The answer that represents the hallmark of the modern biography is D) all of the above, including focus on ordinary people instead of merely kings, rulers, and saints, allowing subject to speak in his or her own words, and including an attempt to be objective and to critically evaluate subject.
He tells them what can he do to figure out his solution to the problem.