fe of poverty that steals Conegunds wealth.Perhaps the most interesting satire on religion is the utopia Voltaire creates in the hidden kingdom. Candid, in nave fashion, stumbles on to this kingdom where all people are equals and no one squabbles. Voltaire credits the success of the kingdom as one absent of religion, religious institution, where no one forces religion upon another. The wise sage says that religion is practiced in the personal daily prayers of the people. This utopia defines Voltaire. His satire isnt necessarily on religious doctrine or belief, only upon the corrupt governing body of religion and the nobility that corrupts it....