Voltaire brief biography of maya
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Voltaire
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Rachel Hammersley
The Journal of Modern History, 2003
A CENTURY BLINDED BY LIGHT O n the night of the opening of Voltaire's Irene, a small "cabal. .. excited principally by men dressed in the costumes of abbes" mingled with the enthusiastic onlookers who had come to pay tribute to the great philosophe. Little is known of these men, except that they were at odds with the majority of spectators. As a firsthand witness, Voltaire's personal secretary, Wagniere, reports, they attempted to disrupt the performance in "violent" protest before its onset. Their voices, however, "were snuffed out by the general applause," serving only to "enliven the room" before the raising of the curtain. Two weeks later, at the performance attended by Voltaire himself, the anti-pkilosophe contingent was even smaller. A single voice, that of th
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Voltaire - Quotes Collection: Biography, Achievements And Life Lessons
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One of the giants of French literature, François-Marie Arouet, better known to the world as Voltaire, was born in Paris in 1694 and was perhaps one of the most versatile poets, wits and writers of his time. Fond of criticizing the establishment around him, he was known for his forward thinking views on the rights of the individual to express their views, long before it became fashionable.
Despite the fact that his father wanted him to become a lawyer, Voltaire knew from an early age that he needed to write. Though he began life as a notary, he was already writing poetry and essays, imbibing his work with a certain wit that made him popular with his contemporaries. Even in his ungdom he was criticizing the local authorities of Paris, something that got him into trouble on several occasions, including a period of imprisonment for his poem Régent which satirized Phillipe II.
Never a man to hold back on what he thought, Voltaire had a dispute with a nobleman that led to him being impri