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Translations increase the faults of a work and spoil its beauties.
Voltaire
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Voltaire
Age: 84 †
Born: 1694
Born: February 20
Died: 1778
Died: May 30
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France
François-Marie Arouet
Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire
Francois Marie Arouet
Dictator of Letters
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More quotes by Voltaire
God has punished the knave, and the devil has drowned the rest.
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Shakespeare is a drunken savage with some imagination whose plays please only in London and Canada.
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If God created us in his own image, we have more than reciprocated.
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The mirror is a worthless invention. The only way to truly see yourself is in the reflection of someone else's eyes.
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Whatever you do, trample down abuses, and love those who love you. Different translation: Whatever you do, crush the infamous thing superstition, and love those who love you.
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The superstitious man is to the rogue what the slave is to the tyrant.
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England has forty-two religions and only two sauces.
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All men are by nature free you have therefore an undoubted liberty to depart whenever you please, but will have many and great difficulties to encounter in passing the frontiers.
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History contains little beyond a list of people who have accommodate themselves with other people's property.
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The best government is a benevolent tyranny tempered by an occasional assassination.
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Happiness is not the portion of man.
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It must be confessed that the inventors of the mechanical arts have been much more useful to men than the inventors of syllogisms.
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To hold a pen is to be at war.
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The greatest consolation in life is to say what one thinks.
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So it is the human condition that to wish for the greatness of one's fatherland is to wish evil to one's neighbors. The citizen of the universe would be the man who wishes his country never to be either greater or smaller, richer or poorer.
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The secret of being a bore... is to tell everything.
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Come! you presence will either give me life or kill me with pleasure.
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The Pope is an idol whose hands are tied and whose feet are kissed.
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I have no more than twenty acres of ground, he replied, the whole of which I cultivate myself with the help of my children and our labor keeps off from us the three great evils - boredom, vice, and want.
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If we would destroy the Christian religion, we must first of all destroy man's belief in the Bible.
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