Page:Works of Voltaire Volume 04.djvu/17

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CONTENTS


Page
I. André Des Touches in Siam 5
II. The Blind as Judges of Color 13
III. The Clergyman and his Soul 15
IV. A Conversation with a Chinese 28
V. Memnon the Philosopher 33
VI. Plato's Dream 42
VII. An Adventure in India 47
VIII. Bababec 51
IX. Ancient Faith and Fable 56
X. The Two Comforters 61
XI. Dialogue between Marcus Aurelius and a Recollet Friar 64
XII. Dialogue between a Brahmin and a Jesuit 70
XIII. Dialogues between Lucretius and Posidonius 76
XIV. Dialogue between a Client and his Lawyer 95
XV. Dialogue between Madame de Maintenon and Mdlle. de L'Enclos 101
XVI. Dialogue between a Savage and a Bachelor of Arts 108

[In 1762 Jean Calas, a Protestant of Toulouse, was done to death by torture on the wheel on the false charge of having slain his son, a suicide. His widow and children were put to the torture to extort a confession, in utter lack of evidence. Voltaire devoted years of unremitting labor to agitating the terrible crime and raising money compensation for the victims. His pamphlets aroused substantial sympathy and protests in England and over the Continent. His efforts led to the writing of over one hundred plays, poems, and pamphlets on the case. Voltaire had the satisfaction of witnessing the triumph of his long struggle. He narrates the facts in this Treatise, which expands into a sweeping exposure of the cruelties committed in the name of religion, in all ages and countries.]