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Legacy of Voltaire
Voltaire’s name has always evoked vivid reactions. Toward the end of his life he was attacked by the
followers of Rousseau, and after 1800 he was held responsible for the Revolution. But the excesses of
clerical reactionaries under the Restoration and the Second Empire rallied the middle and working classes to
his memory. At the end of the 19th century, though conservative critics remained hostile, scientific research
into his life and works was given impetus by Gustave Lanson. Voltaire himself did not hope that all his vast
quantity of writings would be remembered by posterity. His epic poems and lyrical verse are virtually dead,
as are his plays. But his contes are continually republished, and his letters are regarded as one of the great
monuments of French literature. He bequeathed a lesson to humanity, which has lost nothing of its value.
He taught his readers to think clearly; his was a mind at once precise and generous. “He is the necessary
philosopher,” wrote Lanson, “in a world of bureaucrats, engineers, and producers.”
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