Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Essay on Satire - Voltaires Candide as a Satirical Peice :: Candide essays
      Voltaire's Candide as a Satirical Peice                 The novel Candide  by Voltaire is a great  peice of satire that makes fun     of the way people in medievil times thought.  The book is about a man,  Candide,     and his misfortunes.  Throughout the book Candide has countless things  go wrong     in order to show that this is not "the best of all possible worlds"   Voltaire is     trying to make a point through the exaggeration of the inhumanities of man in  a     humorous way.                   The story begins in a castle in  Westphalia.  Candide is convinced by     Cunegonde to take a lesson in "experimental physics".  The two are  caught and     Candide is kicked out of the castle.  While Candide is suffering from  hunger and     cold he is met by two men who trick him into service in the Bulgarian  army.     Candide has a terrible time in the army, he tries to escape, and he is  punished     severely.  During the confusion of war Candide manages to escape. Time  passes     and Candide meets some other interesting individuals and has one bad  experience     after the next.  One day Candide meets a woman who takes care of him and  this is     none other than Cunegonde.  They amuse each other with stories of  misfortune and     travel around the world.  At every place Candide goes something  unthinkable     seems to happen to him.   Candide meets several people along the  way who all     have their own interesting story of misfortune and the inhumanities of  mankind.     Candide ends up on a small farm, married to Cunegonde and living with two     philosophers.  He argues with others at the end of the book if this  really is     the best of all possible worlds and they conclude the we must "work  without     reason" and "must cultivate our garden".                 In this novel Voltaire is extremely influenced  by his frame of reference     and mindset.  He finds room to include almost all of his political  views.  He     takes Candide on a journey through all of the wrongs he beleives in the world  in     order to prove that it was not the best of all possible worlds.  He  shows us the     inhumanities of man through war and social interaction.  He basically  paints an     exaggerated picture of the wrongs of medievil people.  					    
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