I believe I got this collection in order to read both "A Modest Proposal" (probably read decades ago) and "Tale of a Tub". I think I had already read all four parts of "Gulliver's Travels" some time ago but that is well worth a revisit.
There is a great deal to "Gulliver's Travels" beyond the first book which is so dispersed culturally that it was the stuff of the more seriously literary Saturday morning cartoons of my youth.
I always think of Book III, Chapter V when iMessage encourages me to replace a word I have just typed with a little emoji picture - going to try to construct an entire sentence using only those images!
"[Another] project was, a scheme for entirely abolishing all words whatsoever; and this was urged as a great advantage in point of health, as well as brevity. For it is plain, that every word we speak is, in some degree, a diminution of our lunge by corrosion, and, consequently, contributes to the shortening of our lives. An expedient was therefore offered, "that since words are only names for things, it would be more convenient for all men to carry about them such things as were necessary to express a particular business they are to discourse on." ... many of the most learned and wise adhere to the new scheme of expressing themselves by things; which has only this inconvenience attending it, that if a man's business be very great, and of various kinds, he must be obliged, in proportion, to carry a greater bundle of things upon his back, unless he can afford one or two strong servants to attend him. I have often beheld two of those sages almost sinking under the weight of their packs, like pedlars among us, who, when they met in the street, would lay down their loads, open their sacks, and hold conversation for an hour together; then put up their implements, help each other to resume their burdens, and take their leave."