The Allegorical Purpose Of Voltaire's Candide

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Candide is a fictional novel written by Francois-Marie Arouet, or as most people know him by his pen name, Voltaire. As a free thinker in the age of enlightenment, Voltaire fought for human rights and freedom of speech, which made him an enemy in the eyes of the French monarchy. In fact, Candide was written after Voltaire was kicked out of King Frederick's court. By making his novel relatively concise and accessible, Voltaire not only was able to communicate with other enlightened thinkers, but also to the general public. The topic of Candide is the allegorical journey he undertakes which challenges his life philosophy. The purpose of Candide was to question the various institutions of government. Through the use of a storytelling narrative, …show more content…

Recruited by the Bulgars, Candide soon finds himself in the midst of a “heroic butchery” against the Abares (358). Despite the carnage around him, Candide lives up to his namesake, remaining optimistic as he flees to Holland, “the home of religious liberty” (359). Upon arrival, Candide is taken in by a generous Anabaptist, Jacques, reunited with his old tutor, Pangloss, and told about the presumed death of his beloved, Cunégonde. In what seems like the blink of an eye, Jacques and Pangloss are taken from Candide, the former by the historic Lisbon earthquake and the latter by an “auto-da-fé” in hopes of preventing any other catastrophe (363). Lead by an old woman, Candide is then able to “regain what he loved,” Cunégonde, who managed to escape the Abare raid on her father’s castle (364). After the trio leaves Lisbon, the old woman tells her equally, if not more, unfortunate …show more content…

It can be argued that each case of bad luck was a clash of man and nature. The forces of nature just happen to misalign and cause an earthquake when Jacques arrives in Lisbon harbor. Fortune then continues to conspire against Candide by having Jacques tossed into the sea, while allowing the rude sailor and even the officer of Inquisition, who later gets Pangloss killed, to escape unscathed. Even the battle between the Bulgars and Abares can be considered a man versus nature type conflict because Candide and the Baron’s family were unlucky enough to be in the crossfire of someone else’s war. In addition, the battle is an example of man against man conflict. Voltaire’s near identical description of the ravished villages shows the irony behind the shortcomings of human nature. Although both groups of people seem to have the same mindset, the Bulgars and Abares fail to realize the similarities between them. Neither side seemed to understand that if both belligerents were equally “so fine, so brisk, so brilliant, and so well-drilled” then the only reasonable outcome of the war would be a stalemate (358). By criticizing war as a foolish endeavor, Voltaire is also stating that the military, along with religious groups, is an illogical government establishment. The janissaries in the old woman’s story proved to be useless as her great sacrifice of a buttock fails to prevent the soldiers from

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