Candide by Voltaire (rooftoppers .txt) ๐
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Candide is the picaresque tale of the titular characterโs fantastical journey from an insular, idealized life in a picturesque castle through the difficulties and evils of the real world. Satirical, comical, witty, and cutting, Candide was widely banned in its day for containing blasphemous and seditious concepts. Despite that, it survived controversy to become an important book in the Western literary heritage. Today Candide remains a breezy and darkly funny read.
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- Author: Voltaire
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โWith difficulty I disengaged myself from such a heap of slaughtered bodies, and crawled to a large orange tree on the bank of a neighbouring rivulet, where I fell, oppressed with fright, fatigue, horror, despair, and hunger. Immediately after, my senses, overpowered, gave themselves up to sleep, which was yet more swooning than repose. I was in this state of weakness and insensibility, between life and death, when I felt myself pressed by something that moved upon my body. I opened my eyes, and saw a white man, of good countenance, who sighed, and who said between his teeth: โO che sciagura dโessere senza coglioni!โโโ12
XII The Adventures of the Old Woman ContinuedโAstonished and delighted to hear my native language, and no less surprised at what this man said, I made answer that there were much greater misfortunes than that of which he complained. I told him in a few words of the horrors which I had endured, and fainted a second time. He carried me to a neighbouring house, put me to bed, gave me food, waited upon me, consoled me, flattered me; he told me that he had never seen anyone so beautiful as I, and that he never so much regretted the loss of what it was impossible to recover.
โโโI was born at Naples,โ said he, โthere they geld two or three thousand children every year; some die of the operation, others acquire a voice more beautiful than that of women, and others are raised to offices of state.13 This operation was performed on me with great success and I was chapel musician to madam, the Princess of Palestrina.โ
โโโTo my mother!โ cried I.
โโโYour mother!โ cried he, weeping. โWhat! can you be that young princess whom I brought up until the age of six years, and who promised so early to be as beautiful as you?โ
โโโIt is I, indeed; but my mother lies four hundred yards hence, torn in quarters, under a heap of dead bodies.โ
โI told him all my adventures, and he made me acquainted with his; telling me that he had been sent to the Emperor of Morocco by a Christian power, to conclude a treaty with that prince, in consequence of which he was to be furnished with military stores and ships to help to demolish the commerce of other Christian Governments.
โโโMy mission is done,โ said this honest eunuch; โI go to embark for Ceuta, and will take you to Italy. Ma che sciagura dโessere senza coglioni!โ
โI thanked him with tears of commiseration; and instead of taking me to Italy he conducted me to Algiers, where he sold me to the Dey. Scarcely was I sold, than the plague which had made the tour of Africa, Asia, and Europe, broke out with great malignancy in Algiers. You have seen earthquakes; but pray, miss, have you ever had the plague?โ
โNever,โ answered Cunรฉgonde.
โIf you had,โ said the old woman, โyou would acknowledge that it is far more terrible than an earthquake. It is common in Africa, and I caught it. Imagine to yourself the distressed situation of the daughter of a Pope, only fifteen years old, who, in less than three months, had felt the miseries of poverty and slavery, had been ravished almost every day, had beheld her mother drawn in quarters, had experienced famine and war, and was dying of the plague in Algiers. I did not die, however, but my eunuch, and the Dey, and almost the whole seraglio of Algiers perished.
โAs soon as the first fury of this terrible pestilence was over, a sale was made of the Deyโs slaves; I was purchased by a merchant, and carried to Tunis; this man sold me to another merchant, who sold me again to another at Tripoli; from Tripoli I was sold to Alexandria, from Alexandria to Smyrna, and from Smyrna to Constantinople. At length I became the property of an Aga of the Janissaries, who was soon ordered away to the defence of Azof, then besieged by the Russians.
โThe Aga, who was a very gallant man, took his whole seraglio with him, and lodged us in a small fort on the Palus Mรฉotides, guarded by two black eunuchs and twenty soldiers. The Turks killed prodigious numbers of the Russians, but the latter had their revenge. Azof was destroyed by fire, the inhabitants put to the sword, neither sex nor age was spared; until there remained only our little fort, and the enemy wanted to starve us out. The twenty Janissaries had sworn they would never surrender. The extremities of famine to which they were reduced, obliged them to eat our two eunuchs, for fear of violating their oath. And at the end of a few days they resolved also to devour the women.
โWe had a very pious and humane Iman, who preached an excellent sermon, exhorting them not to kill us all at once.
โโโOnly cut off a buttock of each of those ladies,โ said he, โand youโll fare extremely well; if you must go to it again, there will be the same entertainment a
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