Typically, happy endings are associated with myths. But, Fay Weldon describes that “The writers, I do believe, , who get the best and most lasting response from their readers are the writers who offer a happy ending through moral development.” Voltaire’s novel Candide offers a happy ending (moral reconciliation) by transforming the protagonist, Candide, from being naive and overly optimistic to an optimist who has seen what the world really has to offer. Still, the ending of the satire signifies that the world is not necessarily the “best of all possible worlds.”
At the start of the novel, Candide is like a babe in the woods, thinking that the world is the finest of all imaginable worlds (the philosophy of Pangloss, a metaphysico-thelogico-cosmolo-gist)
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As a result of this, Candide’s naivety begins to melt away like snow after he is reunited with the love of his life and realizes that the world is not the best of all