The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (best book club books .TXT) π
Description
Edmond DantΓ¨s is a young man about to be made captain of a cargo vessel and marry his sweetheart. But he is arrested at his pre-wedding feast, having been falsely accused of being a Bonapartist. Thrown into the notorious ChΓ’teau dβIf prison, he eventually meets an ancient inmate who teaches him language, science, and passes hints of a hidden fortune. When Edmond makes his way out of prison, he plots to reward those who stood by him (his old employer, for one), and to seek revenge on the men who betrayed him: one who wrote the letter that denounced him, one that married his fiancΓ©e in his absence, and one who knew DantΓ¨s was innocent but stood idly by and did nothing.
The Count of Monte Cristo is another of Alexandre Dumasβ thrilling adventure stories, possibly more popular even than The Three Musketeers. Originally serialized in a French newspaper over the course of a year-and-a-half, it was enormously popular after its publication in book form, and has never been out of print since. Its timeless story of adventure, historical drama, romance, revenge, and Eastern mystery has been the source of over forty movies and TV series.
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- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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βNo, his horse; of which we each of us ate a slice with a hearty appetite. It was very hard.β
βThe horse?β said Morcerf, laughing.
βNo, the sacrifice,β returned ChΓ’teau-Renaud; βask Debray if he would sacrifice his English steed for a stranger?β
βNot for a stranger,β said Debray, βbut for a friend I might, perhaps.β
βI divined that you would become mine, count,β replied Morrel; βbesides, as I had the honor to tell you, heroism or not, sacrifice or not, that day I owed an offering to bad fortune in recompense for the favors good fortune had on other days granted to us.β
βThe history to which M. Morrel alludes,β continued ChΓ’teau-Renaud, βis an admirable one, which he will tell you some day when you are better acquainted with him; today let us fill our stomachs, and not our memories. What time do you breakfast, Albert?β
βAt half-past ten.β
βPrecisely?β asked Debray, taking out his watch.
βOh, you will give me five minutesβ grace,β replied Morcerf, βfor I also expect a preserver.β
βOf whom?β
βOf myself,β cried Morcerf; βparbleu! do you think I cannot be saved as well as anyone else, and that there are only Arabs who cut off heads? Our breakfast is a philanthropic one, and we shall have at tableβ βat least, I hope soβ βtwo benefactors of humanity.β
βWhat shall we do?β said Debray; βwe have only one Monthyon prize.β
βWell, it will be given to someone who has done nothing to deserve it,β said Beauchamp; βthat is the way the Academy mostly escapes from the dilemma.β
βAnd where does he come from?β asked Debray. βYou have already answered the question once, but so vaguely that I venture to put it a second time.β
βReally,β said Albert, βI do not know; when I invited him three months ago, he was then at Rome, but since that time who knows where he may have gone?β
βAnd you think him capable of being exact?β demanded Debray.
βI think him capable of everything.β
βWell, with the five minutesβ grace, we have only ten left.β
βI will profit by them to tell you something about my guest.β
βI beg pardon,β interrupted Beauchamp; βare there any materials for an article in what you are going to tell us?β
βYes, and for a most curious one.β
βGo on, then, for I see I shall not get to the Chamber this morning, and I must make up for it.β
βI was at Rome during the last Carnival.β
βWe know that,β said Beauchamp.
βYes, but what you do not know is that I was carried off by bandits.β
βThere are no bandits,β cried Debray.
βYes there are, and most hideous, or rather most admirable ones, for I found them ugly enough to frighten me.β
βCome, my dear Albert,β said Debray, βconfess that your cook is behindhand, that the oysters have not arrived from Ostend or Marennes, and that, like Madame de Maintenon, you are going to replace the dish by a story. Say so at once; we are sufficiently well-bred to excuse you, and to listen to your history, fabulous as it promises to be.β
βAnd I say to you, fabulous as it may seem, I tell it as a true one from beginning to end. The brigands had carried me off, and conducted me to a gloomy spot, called the Catacombs of Saint Sebastian.β
βI know it,β said ChΓ’teau-Renaud; βI narrowly escaped catching a fever there.β
βAnd I did more than that,β replied Morcerf, βfor I caught one. I was informed that I was prisoner until I paid the sum of 4,000 Roman crownsβ βabout 24,000 francs. Unfortunately, I had not above 1,500. I was at the end of my journey and of my credit. I wrote to Franzβ βand were he here he would confirm every wordβ βI wrote then to Franz that if he did not come with the four thousand crowns before six, at ten minutes past I should have gone to join the blessed saints and glorious martyrs in whose company I had the honor of being; and Signor Luigi Vampa, such was the name of the chief of these bandits, would have scrupulously kept his word.β
βBut Franz did come with the four thousand crowns,β said ChΓ’teau-Renaud. βA man whose name is Franz dβΓpinay or Albert de Morcerf has not much difficulty in procuring them.β
βNo, he arrived accompanied simply by the guest I am going to present to you.β
βAh, this gentleman is a Hercules killing Cacus, a Perseus freeing Andromeda.β
βNo, he is a man about my own size.β
βArmed to the teeth?β
βHe had not even a knitting-needle.β
βBut he paid your ransom?β
βHe said two words to the chief and I was free.β
βAnd they apologized to him for having carried you off?β said Beauchamp.
βJust so.β
βWhy, he is a second Ariosto.β
βNo, his name is the Count of Monte Cristo.β
βThere is no Count of Monte Cristoβ said Debray.
βI do not think so,β added ChΓ’teau-Renaud, with the air of a man who knows the whole of the European nobility perfectly.
βDoes anyone know anything of a Count of Monte Cristo?β
βHe comes possibly from the Holy Land, and one of his ancestors possessed Calvary, as the Mortemarts did the Dead Sea.β
βI think I can assist your researches,β said Maximilian. βMonte Cristo is a little island I have often heard spoken of by the old sailors my father employedβ βa grain of sand in the centre of the Mediterranean, an atom in the infinite.β
βPrecisely!β cried Albert. βWell, he of whom I speak is the lord and master of this grain of sand, of this atom; he has purchased the title of count somewhere in Tuscany.β
βHe is rich, then?β
βI believe so.β
βBut that ought to be visible.β
βThat is what deceives you, Debray.β
βI do not understand you.β
βHave you read the Arabian Nights?β
βWhat a question!β
βWell, do you know if the persons you see there are rich or poor, if their sacks of wheat are not rubies or diamonds? They seem like poor fishermen, and suddenly they open some mysterious cavern filled with the wealth of the Indies.β
βWhich means?β
βWhich means that my Count of Monte Cristo is one of those fishermen. He has even a name taken from the book, since he calls himself
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