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horrors she has endured are the worst possible horrors one could endure until her conversation
with the old woman in which she learns of the old woman’s own vicissitudes. The old woman
shares her story with Candide and Cunegonde and humbly dissolves Miss Cunegonde’s naïve
perspective.
The old woman is the oddity of this odyssey. At first glance it seems almost impossible to
find reconciliation in her story, but upon a deeper examination I believe it is possible. Leonard
Marsh in his article “Voltaire’s Candide” writes of the old woman, “One character is unique in
that she enters the story immune to change, ready made, having already developed and
degenerated, her youth spent and beauty destroyed, her body already deformed,” but the old
woman is not immune to change and therefore reconciliation exists (Marsh 144). Voltaire
writes:
…the old woman ventured to say:-I should like to know which is worse, being raped a
hundred times by negro pirates, having a buttock cut off, running the gauntlet in the
Bulgar army, being flogged and hanged in an auto-da-fé, being dissected and rowing in
the galleys-experiencing, in a word, all the miseries through which we have passed-or
else just sitting here and doing nothing? (Voltaire 411–412)
This question clearly shows that the old woman has been through and experienced so much that
she now has become naïve, or to say she has forgotten how to lead an uneventful and dull life.
Reconciliation in this example comes from the old woman’s regression from worldliness to
naïveté, rather than a progression from naïveté to worldliness. Reconciliation like this can also be
found in Candide’s loyal valet.
Cacambo, Candide’s loyal valet, is another character who, much like the old woman, has
seen and experienced many things the world has to offer. Prior to becoming Candide’s loyal
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