Zadig; Or, The Book of Fate. Вольтер

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Zadig; Or, The Book of Fate - Вольтер

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       Voltaire

      Zadig; Or, The Book of Fate

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664144058

       CHAP. I.

       The Blind Eye .

       CHAP. II.

       The Nose .

       CHAP. III.

       The Dog and the Horse .

       CHAP. IV.

       The envious Man .

       CHAP. V.

       The Force of Generosity .

       CHAP. VI.

       The Judgments .

       CHAP. VII.

       The Force of Jealousy .

       CHAP. VIII.

       The Thrash’d Wife .

       CHAP. IX.

       The Captive .

       CHAP. X.

       The Funeral Pile .

       CHAP. XI.

       The Evening’s Entertainment.

       CHAP. XII.

       The Rendezvous .

       CHAP. XIII.

       The Free-booter.

       CHAP. XIV.

       The Fisherman.

       CHAP. XV.

       The Basilisk .

       CHAP. XVI.

       The Tournaments .

       CHAP. XVII.

       The Hermit .

       CHAP. XVIII.

       The Ænigmas , or Riddles .

      ZADIG:

      AN

       Oriental History.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      In the Reign of King Moabdar, there was a young Man, a Native of Babylon, by name Zadig; who was not only endowed by Nature with an uncommon Genius, but born of illustrious Parents, who bestowed on him an Education no ways inferior to his Birth. Tho’ rich and young, he knew how to give a Check to his Passions; he was no ways self-conceited; he didn’t always act up to the strictest Rules of Reason himself, and knew how to look on the Foibles of others, with an Eye of Indulgence. Every one was surpriz’d to find, that notwithstanding he had such a Fund of Wit, he never insulted; nay, never so much as rallied any of his Companions, for that Tittle Tattle, which was so vague and empty, so noisy and confus’d; for those rash Reflections, those illiterate Conclusions, and those insipid Jokes; and, in short, for that Flow of unmeaning Words, which was call’d polite Conversation in Babylon. He had learned from the first Book of Zoroaster, that Self-love is like a Bladder full blown, which when once prick’d, discharges a kind of petty Tempest. Zadig, in particular, never boasted of his Contempt of the Fair Sex, or of his Facility to make Conquests amongst them. He was of a generous Spirit; insomuch, that he was not afraid of obliging even an ungrateful Man; strictly adhering to that wise Maxim of Zoroaster. When you are eating,

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