
EDITION DE LA PACIFICATION - THE WORKS OF VOLTAIRE - A CONTEMPORARY VERSION - With Notes by Tobias Smollett, Revised and Modernized - New Translations by William F. Fleming, and an - Introduction by Oliver H.G. Leigh - A CRITIQUE AND BIOGRAPHY - BY - THE RT. HON. JOHN MORLEY - FORTY-THREE VOLUMES - One hundred and sixty-eight designs, comprising reproductions - of rare old engravings, steel plates, photogravures, - and curious fac-similes - VOLUME XIII - E.R. DuMONT - PARIS—LONDON—NEW YORK—CHICAGO - 1901
A PHILOSOPHICAL DICTIONARY - VOLUME IX - By - VOLTAIRE
The WORKS of VOLTAIRE
PROPERTY.
PROPHECIES. - SECTION I.
PROPHETS.
PROVIDENCE.
PURGATORY.
QUACK (OR CHARLATAN).
RAVAILLAC.
In this volume of Voltaire’s celebrated Philosophical Dictionary, the French Enlight thinker turns his sharp wit toward the age‑old question of property and its role in society. He weaves together moral philosophy, economic observation, and biting satire to argue that land ownership fuels personal vigor, family stability, and national prosperity. The essay reads like a lively conversation from the salons of Paris, inviting listeners to hear the clash of ideas that shaped revolutionary thought.
Voltaire examines how the peasants’ direct control of land can generate higher yields than absentee landlords, while also warning that unchecked conquest strips people of their natural rights. He contrasts the English model of freehold with feudal serfdom, illustrating how property underpins commerce, population growth, and even the strength of armies. Richly annotated and accompanied by period engravings, the text comes alive for modern ears, offering a window into the debates that still echo in today’s discussions of ownership and liberty.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (463K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Andrea Ball, Christine Bell & Marc D'Hooghe (From images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
Release date
2011-03-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1694–1778
A dazzling wit of the Enlightenment, this French writer used satire, plays, essays, and stories to challenge intolerance and abuses of power. Best known today for Candide, he remains one of the sharpest and most entertaining voices in European literature.
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