HUD HUDSON
This week she has been reading
Voltaire's Candide.
Xerxes thinks that Voltaire was
a know-it-all-smarty-pants who was downright
mean to her favorite character
in the book . . . the sensible and noble Dr Pangloss.
Besides, Xerxes admires a
philosopher who knows how to stick to his guns!
Candide fainted away, and
Pangloss fetched him some water from a neighboring spring.
The next day, in searching
among the ruins, they found some eatables with which they
repaired their exhausted
strength. After this they assisted the inhabitants in relieving the
distressed and wounded.
Some, whom they had humanely assisted, gave them as good
a dinner as could be expected
under such terrible circumstances. The repast, indeed, was
mournful, and the company
moistened their bread with their tears; but Pangloss endeavored
to comfort them under this
affliction by affirming that things could not be otherwise than they were.
"For," said he, "all this is
for the very best end, for if there is a volcano at Lisbon it could be in
no other spot; and it is
impossible but things should be as they are, for everything is for the
best."
By the side of the preceptor
sat a little man dressed in black, who was one of the familiars
of the Inquisition. This
person, taking him up with great complaisance, said, "Possibly,
my good sir, you do not believe
in original sin, for if everything is best, there could have
been no such thing as the fall
or punishment of man."
"Your Excellency will pardon
me," answered Pangloss, still more politely; "for the fall of man
and the curse consequent
thereupon necessarily entered into the system of the best of worlds."
***
Any comments you might have for Xerxes
can be sent to Hud[dot]Hudson[at]wwu[dot]edu.
I will see to it that she receives them.
***
Xerxes' Junior Year
The week before Xerxes was reading William Shakespeare's
The
Tempest
The week before Xerxes was reading Jack Fincher's
Lefties
The week before Xerxes was reading Yann Martel's
Life of Pi
The week before Xerxes was reading Jorge Luis Borges's
Ficciones
Xerxes' Sophomore Year
The week before Xerxes was reading Dante Alighieri's
Purgatorio
The week before Xerxes was reading Neil Gaiman and Terry
Pratchett's
Good Omens
The week before Xerxes was reading Alfred Lord Tennyson's
In
Memoriam
The week before Xerxes was reading Paul Woodruff's
Reverence
The week before Xerxes was reading Marilynne Robinson's
Gilead
The week before Xerxes was reading William Hjortsberg's
Falling Angel
The week before Xerxes was reading Herman
Melville's
Moby
Dick
The week before Xerxes was reading G.K. Chesterton's
Orthodoxy
The week before Xerxes was reading Anonymous's
Everyman
The week before Xerxes was reading David Maine's
Fallen
The week before Xerxes was reading The Dalai Lama's
An Open
Heart
The week before Xerxes was reading William Shakespeare's
As You
Like It
The week before Xerxes was reading William Shakespeare's
Macbeth
The week before Xerxes was reading Leo Tolstoy's
The Devil
Xerxes' Freshman Year
The week before Xerxes was
reading Jean Toomer's
Cane
The week before Xerxes was reading Patrick Süskind’s
Perfume
The week before Xerxes was reading Gore Vidal's
Creation
The week before Xerxes was reading A.S. Byatt's
Possession
The week before Xerxes was reading Dennis Potter's
Blackeyes
The week before Xerxes was reading Mervyn Peake's
Titus Alone
The week before Xerxes was reading Mervyn Peake's
Gormenghast
The week before Xerxes was reading Mervyn Peake's
Titus
Groan
The week before Xerxes was reading Lois Lowry's
The Giver
The week before Xerxes was reading Rudyard Kipling's
Mandalay
The week before Xerxes was reading Ralph Helfer's
Modoc
The week before Xerxes was reading George MacDonald's
The Portent
The week before Xerxes was reading Robert Graves's
I Claudius
The week before Xerxes was reading Mervyn Peake's
Mr Pye
The week before Xerxes was reading Riff Raff and Magenta's
The Time
Warp