1. Education

Candide

review by Duchan Caudill

From

Candide

Candide

Bantam Classic
In 1759, a vitriolic Frenchman known as Voltaire (1694-1778) wrote "Candide." It was written in retaliation against the tenets of the then-eminent German philosopher Leibniz, who claimed that mankind lives in the best of possible worlds. Voltaire tried to dismantle this notion, and thus created his most widely read book. The Bantam Classic edition offers a highly informative forward by Andre Maurois, with caustic wit and hyperbole.

The Tale of Candide

The story begins in Westphalia, from which young, naive and gullible Candid is forced to flee. A disciple of his tutor, Pangloss, Candide explains his misfortunes and those of others, determined to find links between cause-and-effect. Throughout most of the book, the reader is shown the adverse reactions of pre-established harmony (as Leibniz proposed): that even distress is a necessary good for man, and for the order of the world.

Of course, this belief is repeatedly mocked and undercut by trials and tribulations, numerous incidents that bespeak the brutality of man, and the indifference of the world in general. Eventually, Candide is welcomed in a mythical land across the sea, in a place sought after by generations of explorers. However, love prompts Candid to venture on...

Voltaire had his own concept of God; and the author is often called an agnostic. He loathed the Church's abuses of power and the hypocrisy. "Candide" is Voltaire's way of lashing out against the clergy, but it also led to the defamation of Voltaire by the Church.

©2012 About.com. All rights reserved.

A part of The New York Times Company.