The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (best book club books .TXT) ๐
Description
Edmond Dantรจs 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 Chรขteau dโIf 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 fiancรฉe in his absence, and one who knew Dantรจs was innocent but stood idly by and did nothing.
The Count of Monte Cristo is another of Alexandre Dumasโ 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
Read book online ยซThe Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (best book club books .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Alexandre Dumas
โYou want Valentine, do you not? I will tell them to send her to you.โ
Villefort returned, and dโAvrigny met him in the passage.
โWell, how is he now?โ asked he.
โCome in here,โ said dโAvrigny, and he took him into the chamber where the sick man lay.
โIs he still in a fit?โ said the procureur.
โHe is dead.โ
Villefort drew back a few steps, and, clasping his hands, exclaimed, with real amazement and sympathy, โDead?โ โand so soon too!โ
โYes, it is very soon,โ said the doctor, looking at the corpse before him; โbut that ought not to astonish you; Monsieur and Madame de Saint-Mรฉran died as soon. People die very suddenly in your house, M. de Villefort.โ
โWhat?โ cried the magistrate, with an accent of horror and consternation, โare you still harping on that terrible idea?โ
โStill, sir; and I shall always do so,โ replied dโAvrigny, โfor it has never for one instant ceased to retain possession of my mind; and that you may be quite sure I am not mistaken this time, listen well to what I am going to say, M. de Villefort.โ
The magistrate trembled convulsively.
โThere is a poison which destroys life almost without leaving any perceptible traces. I know it well; I have studied it in all its forms and in the effects which it produces. I recognized the presence of this poison in the case of poor Barrois as well as in that of Madame de Saint-Mรฉran. There is a way of detecting its presence. It restores the blue color of litmus-paper reddened by an acid, and it turns syrup of violets green. We have no litmus-paper, but, see, here they come with the syrup of violets.โ
The doctor was right; steps were heard in the passage. M. dโAvrigny opened the door, and took from the hands of the chambermaid a cup which contained two or three spoonfuls of the syrup, he then carefully closed the door.
โLook,โ said he to the procureur, whose heart beat so loudly that it might almost be heard, โhere is in this cup some syrup of violets, and this decanter contains the remainder of the lemonade of which M. Noirtier and Barrois partook. If the lemonade be pure and inoffensive, the syrup will retain its color; if, on the contrary, the lemonade be drugged with poison, the syrup will become green. Look closely!โ
The doctor then slowly poured some drops of the lemonade from the decanter into the cup, and in an instant a light cloudy sediment began to form at the bottom of the cup; this sediment first took a blue shade, then from the color of sapphire it passed to that of opal, and from opal to emerald. Arrived at this last hue, it changed no more. The result of the experiment left no doubt whatever on the mind.
โThe unfortunate Barrois has been poisoned,โ said dโAvrigny, โand I will maintain this assertion before God and man.โ
Villefort said nothing, but he clasped his hands, opened his haggard eyes, and, overcome with his emotion, sank into a chair.
LXXX The AccusationM. dโAvrigny soon restored the magistrate to consciousness, who had looked like a second corpse in that chamber of death.
โOh, death is in my house!โ cried Villefort.
โSay, rather, crime!โ replied the doctor.
โM. dโAvrigny,โ cried Villefort, โI cannot tell you all I feel at this momentโ โterror, grief, madness.โ
โYes,โ said M. dโAvrigny, with an imposing calmness, โbut I think it is now time to act. I think it is time to stop this torrent of mortality. I can no longer bear to be in possession of these secrets without the hope of seeing the victims and society generally revenged.โ
Villefort cast a gloomy look around him. โIn my house,โ murmured he, โin my house!โ
โCome, magistrate,โ said M. dโAvrigny, โshow yourself a man; as an interpreter of the law, do honor to your profession by sacrificing your selfish interests to it.โ
โYou make me shudder, doctor. Do you talk of a sacrifice?โ
โI do.โ
โDo you then suspect anyone?โ
โI suspect no one; death raps at your doorโ โit entersโ โit goes, not blindfolded, but circumspectly, from room to room. Well, I follow its course, I track its passage; I adopt the wisdom of the ancients, and feel my way, for my friendship for your family and my respect for you are as a twofold bandage over my eyes; wellโ โโ
โOh, speak, speak, doctor; I shall have courage.โ
โWell, sir, you have in your establishment, or in your family, perhaps, one of the frightful monstrosities of which each century produces only one. Locusta and Agrippina, living at the same time, were an exception, and proved the determination of Providence to effect the entire ruin of the Roman empire, sullied by so many crimes. Brunhilda and Fredegund were the results of the painful struggle of civilization in its infancy, when man was learning to control mind, were it even by an emissary from the realms of darkness. All these women had been, or were, beautiful. The same flower of innocence had flourished, or was still flourishing, on their brow, that is seen on the brow of the culprit in your house.โ
Villefort shrieked, clasped his hands, and looked at the doctor with a supplicating air. But the latter went on without pity:
โโโSeek whom the crime will profit,โ says an axiom of jurisprudence.โ
โDoctor,โ cried Villefort, โalas, doctor, how often has manโs justice been deceived by those fatal words. I know not why, but I feel that this crimeโ โโ
โYou acknowledge, then, the existence of the crime?โ
โYes, I see too plainly that it does exist. But it seems that it is intended to affect me personally. I fear an attack myself, after all these disasters.โ
โOh, man!โ murmured dโAvrigny, โthe most selfish of all animals, the most personal of all creatures, who believes the earth turns, the sun shines, and death strikes for him aloneโ โan ant cursing God from the top of a blade of grass! And have those who have lost their lives lost nothing?โ โM. de Saint-Mรฉran, Madame de Saint-Mรฉran, M. Noirtierโ โโ
โHow? M. Noirtier?โ
โYes; think you it was the poor
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