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Hypocrisy In Voltaire's Candide

Good Essays

Candide, with his innocent optimism, taught the reader that there isn’t always a silver lining; Irene Redfield proved that one’s judgement and actions don’t always go hand-in-hand; Bob Hicok illustrated that, despite all of one’s observations, hope can still be found. These lessons were brought to us, for the most part, through observations which these narrators had seen and experienced. The lessons found in these texts also show the hypocrisy which these characters have, despite their observations and experiences, still permeates their beliefs and morals. To begin, it would be best to know what observation entails: the term “observation” means “the action or process of observing something or someone carefully or in order to gain information” or, in fewer words, gaining knowledge through watching the world around us. The use of such vivid imagery and observation has long been a powerful weapon in the arsenal of great writers, like Stephen King and J.K. Rowling, and has brought about multiple lessons and teachings for people throughout the ages. The narrator’s observations in Voltaire’s “Candide, or Optimism”, Larson’s “Passing” and Hicok’s “Go Greyhound” allows them to realize their own hypocrisy and disconnect between their actions/experiences and beliefs.
Voltaire’s use of imagery and satire in “Candide, or Optimism” allows the reader to contemplate how Candide has such an optimistic attitude in the face of the trials and tribulations which he and his friends endured.

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