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Letters on England



by Voltaire (Francois Marie Arouet)









INTRODUCTION







Francois Marie Arouet, who called himself Voltaire, was the son of

Francois Arouet of Poitou, who lived in Paris, had given up his

office of notary two years before the birth of this his third son,

and obtained some years afterwards a treasurer's office in the

Chambre des Comptes. Voltaire was born in the year 1694. He lived

until within ten or eleven years of the outbreak of the Great French

Revolution, and was a chief leader in the movement of thought that

preceded the Revolution. Though he lived to his eighty-fourth year,

Voltaire was born with a weak body. His brother Armand, eight years

his senior, became a Jansenist. Voltaire when ten years old was

placed with the Jesuits in the College Louis-le-Grand. There he was

taught during seven years, and his genius was encouraged in its bent

for literature; skill in speaking and in writing being especially

fostered in the system of education which the Jesuits had planned to

produce capable men who by voice and pen could give a reason for the

faith they held. Verses written for an invalid soldier at the age

of eleven won for young Voltaire the friendship of Ninon l'Enclos,

who encouraged him to go on writing verses. She died soon

afterwards, and remembered him with a legacy of two thousand livres

for purchase of books. He wrote in his lively school-days a tragedy

that afterwards he burnt. At the age of seventeen he left the

College Louis-le-Grand, where he said afterwards that he had been

taught nothing but Latin and the Stupidities. He was then sent to

the law schools, and saw life in Paris as a gay young poet who, with

all his brilliant liveliness, had an aptitude for looking on the

tragic side of things, and one of whose first poems was an "Ode on

the Misfortunes of Life." His mother died when he was twenty.

Voltaire's father thought him a fool for his versifying, and

attached him as secretary to the Marquis of Chateauneuf; when he

went as ambassador to the Hague. In December, 1713, he was

dismissed for his irregularities. In Paris his unsteadiness and his

addiction to literature caused his father to rejoice in getting him

housed in a country chateau with M. de Caumartin. M. de Caumartin's

father talked with such enthusiasm of Henri IV. and Sully that

Voltaire planned the writing of what became his Henriade, and his

"History of the Age of Louis XIV.," who died on the 1st of

September, 1715.



Under the regency that followed, Voltaire got into trouble again and

again through the sharpness of his pen, and at last, accused of

verse that satirised the Regent, he was locked up--on the 17th of

May, 1717--in the Bastille. There he wrote the first two books of

his Henriade, and finished a play on OEdipus, which he had begun at

the age of eighteen. He did not obtain full liberty until the 12th

of April, 1718, and it was at this time--with a clearly formed

design to associate the name he took with work of high attempt in

literature--that Francois Marie Arouet, aged twenty-four, first

called himself Voltaire.



Voltaire's OEdipe was played with success in November, 1718. A few

months later he was again banished from Paris, and finished the

Henriade in his retirement, as well as another play, Artemise, that

was acted in February, 1720. Other plays followed. In December,

1721, Voltaire visited Lord Bolingbroke, who was then an exile from

England, at the Chateau of La Source. There was now constant

literary activity. From July to October, 1722, Voltaire visited

Holland with Madame de Rupelmonde. After a serious attack of small-

pox in November, 1723, Voltaire was active as a poet about the

Court. He was then in receipt of a pension of two thousand livres

from the king, and had inherited more than twice as much by the

death of his father in January, 1722. But in December, 1725,
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