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Candide
Contributor(s): Smollett, Tobias (Translator), Voltaire (Author)
ISBN: 1545043574     ISBN-13: 9781545043578
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $12.25  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: June 2017
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Satire
- Fiction | Classics
Lexile Measure: 1010
Physical Information: 0.24" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (0.36 lbs) 116 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Dr. Pangloss, to prove the existence of design in the universe, says that noses were made to carry spectacles, and so we have spectacles. A modern satirist would not try to paint with Voltaire's quick brush the doctrine that he wanted to expose. And he would choose a more complicated doctrine than Dr. Pangloss's optimism, would study it more closely, feel his destructive way about it with a more learned and caressing malice. His attack, stealthier, more flexible and more patient than Voltaire's, would call upon us, especially when his learning got a little out of control, to be more than patient. Now and then he would bore us. "Candide" never bored anybody except William Wordsworth. Voltaire's men and women point his case against optimism by starting high and falling low. A modern could not go about it after this fashion. He would not plunge his people into an unfamiliar misery. He would just keep them in the misery they were born to. But such an account of Voltaire's procedure is as misleading as the plaster cast of a dance. Look at his procedure again. Mademoiselle Cun gonde, the illustrious Westphalian, sprung from a family that could prove seventy-one quarterings, descends and descends until we find her earning her keep by washing dishes in the Propontis. The aged faithful attendant, victim of a hundred acts of rape by negro pirates, remembers that she is the daughter of a pope, and that in honor of her approaching marriage with a Prince of Massa-Carrara all Italy wrote sonnets of which not one was passable.