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Satire In Candide

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Candide, By Voltiare

Candide, published in 1759 by Voltaire, is a satirical novella criticizing the type of European Civilization Voltaire grew up around. Voltaire is known for his literary works mocking the time period he lived in, especially when it came to their religious beliefs and the aristocracy he was surrounded with. Due to Voltaire’s experiences in Paris with European Society, Candide showcases his contempt for organized religion, noble rank, and optimist philosophy.

Candide, the illegitimate son of a Baron’s sister, lives in the Baron’s castle, studying under the philosopher Pangloss. Pangloss teaches Candide his theory of optimism, keeping Candide innocent to the world beyond the castle. He thinks that the castle is the best …show more content…

She tells him her story, one of a life of wealth and privilege, misfortune, and slavery. She informs Candide that Cunégonde is still alive, and takes him to her. She is being kept as a sex slave, and Candide kills her owners, and the two of them along with the old woman flee to South America. It’s in South America that Cunégonde is proposed to, while Candide runs from people trying to catch him for the death of Cunégonde’s captors. He stays with the Jesuits, where he meets Cunégonde’s brother, who refuses to let him marry her because of his inferior birth.

It’s after this that Candide and accompanying new friend Cacambo, a slave, run across the city of Eldorado, a beautiful wealthy place that practices freedom of religion and speech: Candide’s ideal society. However, without his love Cunégonde, he is still unhappy, and leaves to find her with his newly acquired wealth, which is unfortunately stolen from him. Regardless, he sets off for Europe, where he rediscovers some of his wealth, but cannot find Cunégonde or Cacambo, who have both been …show more content…

As he expressed several times in the book, he has a severe hatred for the Catholic Church (and organized religion in general), as he views it as corrupt. The history of the old woman showed this, as she says “I am the daughter of Pope Urban X, and of the Princess of Palestrina. Until the age of fourteen I was brought up in a palace, to which all the castles of your German Barons would scarcely have served for stables; and one of my robes was worth more than all the magnificence of Westphalia.” . Voltaire’s point here is to show the corruption of wealth in the church, and pose the question of why the church must be that wealthy. Priests in the Catholic Church, especially the Pope, are held to abstain from sex, which obviously was not the case of Pope Urban X, if the Old woman was the result. He also shows his contempt of the church when he meets the Baron in South America. While discussing how he managed to escape the Bulgarians alive, the Baron says “But I grew prettier, and the reverend Father Didrie,…conceived the tenderest friendship for me.” . In its essence, the Baron only moved up the ranks of the Jesuits do to a close taboo relationship with Father Didrie, again showing corruption within organized

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