The old woman's story also functions as a criticism of religious hypocrisy. She is the daughter of the Pope, the most prominent member of the Catholic Church. The Pope has not only violated his vow of celibacy, but has also proven unable and unwilling to protect his daughter from the misfortunes that befell her.
Candide also displays this sense of hope in light of his many hardships. He honors his commitment to marry Cunegonde at the end of the story despite the physical abnormalities that have plagued her. Cunegonde is a young and beautiful woman at the beginning of Candide. Mirroring Candide's naive optimism, their love plays out in unrealistic romantic cliches: a blush, a dropped handkerchief, a surreptitious kiss behind a screen. However, this romance in the shelter of the Baron's estate is too far removed from reality to last, and Candide's veil of ignorance cannot last either. The baron soon discovers the tryst and expels Candide from this garden of bliss. Up until their meeting in Chapter 29, Candide - who had not seen Cunegonde's transformation - believes she is still the innocent, beautiful girl she was at the beginning of the story: "Candide, that tender lover, seeing his fair Cunegonde sunburned, blear-eyed, flat-breasted, with wrinkles around her eyes and red, chapped arms, recoiled three paces in horror, and then advanced from mere politeness" (Voltaire 141). Ironically, Cunegonde does not know she is now ugly either, as "no one had told her so" (Ibid 97). She reminds Candide of his matrimonial intentions, and Candide, who is finally awakened to the brutality of the world, agrees to marry her, although she becomes "uglier every day... shrewish and intolerable" (Ibid 98). Her ugliness symbolizes the end of Candide's empty dreams as it shatters his unrealistic hope for perfection. Her beauty had symbolized Candide's ideal for happiness throughout the novel. However, in the end she proves a useful member of the small society in which she lives on Candide's farm. She becomes a good pastry cook and finds pleasure and satisfaction in work.
In Voltaire's Candide, the accounts of three women serve to exemplify the questions of gender status in Voltaire's Europe. The stories of Cunegonde, Paquette, and the Old Woman are discussed to highlight the suffering...
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