This same curiously inept criticism of the war which cost France her American provinces occurs in Voltaire’s Memoirs, wherein he says, “In 1756 England made a piratical war upon France for some acres of snow.”
See also his Précis du Siècle de Louis XV. ↩
Admiral Byng was shot on March 14, 1757. ↩
Commenting upon this passage, M. Sarcey says admirably: “All is there! In those ten lines Voltaire has gathered all the griefs and all the terrors of these creatures; the picture is admirable for its truth and power! But do you not feel the pity and sympathy of the painter? Here irony becomes sad, and in a way an avenger. Voltaire cries out with horror against the society which throws some of its members into such an abyss. He has his ‘Bartholomew’ fever; we tremble with him through contagion.”
↩
The following particulars of the six monarchs may prove not uninteresting. Achmet III (b. 1673, d. 1739) was dethroned in 1730. Ivan VI (b. 1740, d. 1762) was dethroned in 1741. Charles Edward Stuart, the Pretender (b. 1720, d. 1788). Auguste III (b. 1696, d. 1763). Stanislaus (b. 1682, d. 1766). Theodore (b. 1690, d. 1755). It will be observed that, although quite impossible for the six kings ever to have met, five of them might have been made to do so without any anachronism. ↩
François Leopold Ragotsky (1676–1735). ↩
Colophon
Candide
was published in 1759 by
Voltaire.
It was translated from French in 1918 by
The Modern Library.
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