Evelyn Beatrice Hall
Overview
 
Evelyn Beatrice Hall, who wrote under the pseudonym
Pseudonym
A pseudonym is a name that a person assumes for a particular purpose and that differs from his or her original orthonym...

 S.G. Tallentyre, was an English
English people
The English are a nation and ethnic group native to England, who speak English. The English identity is of early mediaeval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Anglecynn. England is now a country of the United Kingdom, and the majority of English people in England are British Citizens...

 writer best known for her biography
Biography
A biography is a detailed description or account of someone's life. More than a list of basic facts , biography also portrays the subject's experience of those events...

 of Voltaire
Voltaire
François-Marie Arouet , better known by the pen name Voltaire , was a French Enlightenment writer, historian and philosopher famous for his wit and for his advocacy of civil liberties, including freedom of religion, free trade and separation of church and state...

 with the title The Friends of Voltaire
The Friends of Voltaire
The Friends of Voltaire, written by Evelyn Beatrice Hall under the pseudonym S.G. Tallentyre, was published in 1906. In 1907 it was published in Great Britain under the author's own name by Putnam's Sons. This classic work about Voltaire was still being printed nearly 100 years later in 2003...

, which she completed in 1906.

Hall wrote the phrase: "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it" (which is often misattributed to Voltaire himself), as an illustration of Voltaire's beliefs in her biography on him.
Quotations

He who has lost only those of whose faith and truth he is sure, has not yet reached the depth of human desolation.

Ch. 1 : Jean le Rond d'Alembert|D'Alembert: The Thinker, p.28

For the first time he looked into his heart and wrote, and thus for the first time he touched the hearts of others; the cold style took fire, and beneath the clumsy periods welled tears.

Ch. 1 : D'Alembert: The Thinker, p.29

It is by character and not by intellect the world is won.

Ch. 1 : D'Alembert: The Thinker, p. 31

If to be great means to be good, then Denis Diderot was a little man. But if to be great means to do great things in the teeth of great obstacles, then none can refuse him a place in the temple of the Immortals.

Ch. 2 : Diderot : The Talker, p. 61

It is as the father of Encyclopédie|the Encyclopedia that Denis Diderot merits eternal recognition. Guilty as he was in almost every relation of life towards the individual, for mankind, in the teeth of danger and of infidelity, at the ill-paid sacrifice of the best years of his exuberant life, he produced that book which first levelled a free path to knowledge and enfranchised the soul of his generation.

Ch. 2 : Diderot : The Talker, p. 61

A Platonic friendship is perhaps only possible when one or other of the Platonists is in love with a third person.

Ch. 3 : Galiani : The Wit, p. 79

There is always more goodness in the world than there appears to be, because goodness is of its very nature modest and retiring.

Ch. 7 : Claude Adrien Helvétius|Helvétius : The Contradiction, p. 188

All men now allow that if any human power could have stemmed the avalanche of the French Revolution, it would have been the reforms of Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Baron de Laune|Turgot.

Ch. 8 : Turgot: The Statesman, p. 207

 
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