Candide - Voltaire

This quote was added by malevolarky
This discourse gave rise to new reflections, and Martin especially concluded that man was born to live either in a state of distracting inquietude or of lethargic disgust. Candide did not quite agree to that, but he affirmed nothing. Pangloss owned that he had always suffered horribly, but as he had once asserted that everything went wonderfully well, he asserted it still, though he no longer believed it.

Train on this quote


Rate this quote:
2.6 out of 5 based on 9 ratings.

Edit Text

Edit author and title

(Changes are manually reviewed)

or just leave a comment:


Test your skills, take the Typing Test.

Score (WPM) distribution for this quote. More.

Best scores for this typing test

Name WPM Accuracy
eventlogging 170.00 100%
strikeemblem 114.52 98.6%
bmcgoo 109.69 97.8%
jacqueline1234 105.97 96.9%
dante-didit 102.79 96.9%
prodigy5723 99.32 94.9%
kyle_w 99.26 94.9%
teilo 93.37 98.0%
roginn 91.80 98.8%
ashrosetta123 88.05 96%

Recently for

Name WPM Accuracy
user108043 83.92 90.5%
user114902 43.24 97.1%
youdontwant2kno 80.75 97.8%
user112241 79.94 94.4%
lexervoid 66.42 90.3%
matysek 66.64 95.8%
dante-didit 102.79 96.9%
allenlau1994 60.14 91.8%