The Count of Monte CristobyAlexandre Dumas
View Table of ContentsThe Count of Monte Cristo
Chapter 1: Marseilles -- The Arrival.
Chapter 2: Father and Son.
Chapter 3: The Catalans.
Chapter 4: Conspiracy.
Chapter 5: The Marriage-Feast.
Chapter 6: The Deputy Procureur du Roi.
Chapter 7: The Examination.
Chapter 8: The Chateau D'If.
Chapter 9: The Evening of the Betrothal.
Chapter 10: The King's Closet at the Tuileries.
Chapter 11: The Corsican Ogre.
Chapter 12: Father and Son.
Chapter 13: The Hundred Days.
Chapter 14: The Two Prisoners.
Chapter 15: Number 34 and Number 27.
Chapter 16: A Learned Italian.
Chapter 17: The Abbe's Chamber.
Chapter 18: The Treasure.
Chapter 19: The Third Attack.
Chapter 20: The Cemetery of the Chateau D'If.
Chapter 21: The Island of Tiboulen.
Chapter 22: The Smugglers.
Chapter 23: The Island of Monte Cristo.
Chapter 24: The Secret Cave.
Chapter 25: The Unknown.
Chapter 26: The Pont du Gard Inn.
Chapter 27: The Story.
Chapter 28: The Prison Register.
Chapter 29: The House of Morrel & Son.
Chapter 30: The Fifth of September.
Chapter 31: Italy: Sinbad the Sailor.
Chapter 32: The Waking.
Chapter 33: Roman Bandits.
Chapter 34: The Colosseum.
Chapter 35: La Mazzolata.
Chapter 36: The Carnival at Rome.
Chapter 37: The Catacombs of Saint Sebastian.
Chapter 38: The Compact.
Chapter 39: The Guests.
Chapter 40: The Breakfast.
Chapter 41: The Presentation.
Chapter 42: Monsieur Bertuccio.
Chapter 43: The House at Auteuil.
Chapter 44: The Vendetta.
Chapter 45: The Rain of Blood.
Chapter 46: Unlimited Credit.
Chapter 47: The Dappled Grays.
Chapter 48: Ideology.
Chapter 49: Haidee.
Chapter 50: The Morrel Family.
Chapter 51: Pyramus and Thisbe.
Chapter 52: Toxicology.
Chapter 53: Robert le Diable.
Chapter 54: A Flurry in Stocks.
Chapter 55: Major Cavalcanti.
Chapter 56: Andrea Cavalcanti.
Chapter 57: In the Lucerne Patch.
Chapter 58: M. Noirtier de Villefort.
Chapter 59: The Will.
Chapter 60: The Telegraph.
Chapter 61: How a Gardener may get rid of the Dormice that eat His Peaches.
Chapter 62: Ghosts.
Chapter 63: The Dinner.
Chapter 64: The Beggar.
Chapter 65: A Conjugal Scene.
Chapter 66: Matrimonial Projects.
Chapter 67: At the Office of the King's Attorney.
Chapter 68: A Summer Ball.
Chapter 69: The Inquiry.
Chapter 70: The Ball.
Chapter 71: Bread and Salt.
Chapter 72: Madame de Saint-Meran.
Chapter 73: The Promise.
Chapter 74: The Villefort Family Vault.
Chapter 75: A Signed Statement.
Chapter 76: Progress of Cavalcanti the Younger.
Chapter 77: Haidee.
Chapter 78: We hear From Yanina.
Chapter 79: The Lemonade.
Chapter 80: The Accusation.
Chapter 81: The Room of the Retired Baker.
Chapter 82: The Burglary.
Chapter 83: The Hand of God.
Chapter 84: Beauchamp.
Chapter 85: The Journey.
Chapter 86: The Trial.
Chapter 87: The Challenge.
Chapter 88: The Insult.
Chapter 89: A Nocturnal Interview.
Chapter 90: The Meeting.
Chapter 91: Mother and Son.
Chapter 92: The Suicide.
Chapter 93: Valentine.
Chapter 94: Maximilian's Avowal.
Chapter 95: Father and Daughter.
Chapter 96: The Contract.
Chapter 97: The Departure for Belgium.
Chapter 98: The Bell and Bottle Tavern.
Chapter 99: The Law.
Chapter 100: The Apparition.
Chapter 101: Locusta.
Chapter 102: Valentine.
Chapter 103: Maximilian.
Chapter 104: Danglars Signature.
Chapter 105: The Cemetery of Pere-la-Chaise.
Chapter 106: Dividing the Proceeds.
Chapter 107: The Lions' Den.
Chapter 108: The Judge.
Chapter 109: The Assizes.
Chapter 110: The Indictment.
Chapter 111: Expiation.
Chapter 112: The Departure.
Chapter 113: The Past.
Chapter 114: Peppino.
Chapter 115: Luigi Vampa's Bill of Fare.
Chapter 116: The Pardon.
Chapter 117: The Fifth of October.
Chapter 54: A Flurry in Stocks.
Some days after this meeting, Albert de Morcerf visited the Count of Monte Cristo at his house in the Champs Elysees, which had already assumed that palace-like appearance which the count's princely fortune enabled him to give even to his most temporary residences. He came to renew the thanks of Madame Danglars which had been already conveyed to the count through the medium of a letter, signed "Baronne Danglars, nee Hermine de Servieux." Albert was accompanied by Lucien Debray, who, joining in his friend's conversation, added some passing compliments, the source of which the count's talent for finesse easily enabled him to guess. He was convinced that Lucien's visit was due to a double feeling of curiosity, the larger half of which sentiment emanated from the Rue de la Chaussee d'Antin. In short, Madame Danglars, not being able personally to examine in detail the domestic economy and household arrangements of a man who gave away horses worth 30,000 francs and who went to the opera with a Greek slave wearing diamonds to the amount of a million of money, had deputed those eyes, by which she was accustomed to see, to give her a faithful account of the mode of life of this incomprehensible person. But the count did not appear to suspect that there could be the slightest connection between Lucien's visit and the curiosity of the baroness.
"You are in constant communication with the Baron Danglars?" the count inquired of Albert de Morcerf.
"Yes, count, you know what I told you?"
"All remains the same, then, in that quarter?"
"It is more than ever a settled thing," said Lucien, -- and, considering that this remark was all that he was at that time called upon to make, he adjusted the glass to his eye, and biting the top of his gold headed cane, began to make the tour of the apartment, examining the arms and the pictures.
"Ah," said Monte Cristo "I did not expect that the affair would be so promptly concluded."
"Oh, things take their course without our assistance. While we are forgetting them, they are falling into their appointed order; and when, again, our attention is directed to them, we are surprised at the progress they have made towards the proposed end. My father and M. Danglars served together in Spain, my father in the army and M. Danglars in the commissariat department. It was there that my father, ruined by the revolution, and M. Danglars, who never had possessed any patrimony, both laid the foundations of their different fortunes."
"Yes," said Monte Cristo "I think M. Danglars mentioned that in a visit which I paid him; and," continued he, casting a side-glance at Lucien, who was turning over the leaves of an album, "Mademoiselle Eugenie is pretty -- I think I remember that to be her name."
"Very pretty, or rather, very beautiful," replied Albert, "but of that style of beauty which I do not appreciate; I am an ungrateful fellow."
"You speak as if you were already her husband."
"Ah," returned Albert, in his turn looking around to see what Lucien was doing.
"Really," said Monte Cristo, lowering his voice, "you do not appear to me to be very enthusiastic on the subject of this marriage."
"Mademoiselle Danglars is too rich for me," replied Morcerf, "and that frightens me."
"Bah," exclaimed Monte Cristo, "that's a fine reason to give. Are you not rich yourself?"
"My father's income is about 50,000 francs per annum; and he will give me, perhaps, ten or twelve thousand when I marry."
"That, perhaps, might not be considered a large sum, in Paris especially," said the count; "but everything does not depend on wealth, and it is a fine thing to have a good name, and to occupy a high station in society. Your name is celebrated, your position magnificent; and then the Comte de Morcerf is a soldier, and it is pleasing to see the integrity of a Bayard united to the poverty of a Duguesclin; disinterestedness is the brightest ray in which a noble sword can shine. As for me, I consider the union with Mademoiselle Danglars a most suitable one; she will enrich you, and you will ennoble her." Albert shook his head, and looked thoughtful. "There is still something else," said he.
"I confess," observed Monte Cristo, "that I have some difficulty in comprehending your objection to a young lady who is both rich and beautiful."
"Oh," said Morcerf, "this repugnance, if repugnance it may be called, is not all on my side."
"Whence can it arise, then? for you told me your father desired the marriage."
"It is my mother who dissents; she has a clear and penetrating judgment, and does not smile on the proposed union. I cannot account for it, but she seems to entertain some prejudice against the Danglars."
"Ah," said the count, in a somewhat forced tone, "that may be easily explained; the Comtesse de Morcerf, who is aristocracy and refinement itself, does not relish the idea of being allied by your marriage with one of ignoble birth; that is natural enough."
"I do not know if that is her reason," said Albert, "but one thing I do know, that if this marriage be consummated, it will render her quite miserable. There was to have been a meeting six weeks ago in order to talk over and settle the affair; but I had such a sudden attack of indisposition" --
"Real?" interrupted the count, smiling.
"Oh, real enough, from anxiety doubtless, -- at any rate they postponed the matter for two months. There is no hurry, you know. I am not yet twenty-one, and Eugenie is only seventeen; but the two months expire next week. It must be done. My dear count, you cannot imagine how my mind is harassed. How happy you are in being exempt from all this!"
"Well, and why should not you be free, too? What prevents you from being so?"
"Oh, it will be too great a disappointment to my father if I do not marry Mademoiselle Danglars."
"Marry her then," said the count, with a significant shrug of the shoulders.
"Yes," replied Morcerf, "but that will plunge my mother into positive grief."
"Then do not marry her," said the count.
"Well, I shall see. I will try and think over what is the best thing to be done; you will give me your advice, will you not, and if possible extricate me from my unpleasant position? I think, rather than give pain to my dear mother, I would run the risk of offending the count." Monte Cristo turned away; he seemed moved by this last remark. "Ah," said he to Debray, who had thrown himself into an easy-chair at the farthest extremity of the salon, and who held a pencil in his right hand and an account book in his left, "what are you doing there? Are you making a sketch after Poussin?"
"Oh, no," was the tranquil response; "I am too fond of art to attempt anything of that sort. I am doing a little sum in arithmetic."
"In arithmetic?"
"Yes; I am calculating -- by the way, Morcerf, that indirectly concerns you -- I am calculating what the house of Danglars must have gained by the last rise in Haiti bonds; from 206 they have risen to 409 in three days, and the prudent banker had purchased at 206; therefore he must have made 300,000 livres."
"That is not his biggest scoop," said Morcerf; "did he not make a million in Spaniards this last year?"
"My dear fellow," said Lucien, "here is the Count of Monte Cristo, who will say to you, as the Italians do, --
"`Danaro e santita, Meta della meta.'*
* "Money and sanctity, Each in a moiety.
"When they tell me such things, I only shrug my shoulders and say nothing."
"But you were speaking of Haitians?" said Monte Cristo.
"Ah, Haitians, -- that is quite another thing! Haitians are the ecarte of French stock-jobbing. We may like bouillotte, delight in whist, be enraptured with boston, and yet grow tired of them all; but we always come back to ecarte -- it is not only a game, it is a hors-d'oeuvre! M. Danglars sold yesterday at 405, and pockets 300,000 francs. Had he but waited till to-day, the price would have fallen to 205, and instead of gaining 300,000 francs, he would have lost 20 or 25,000."
"And what has caused the sudden fall from 409 to 206?" asked Monte Cristo. "I am profoundly ignorant of all these stock-jobbing intrigues."
"Because," said Albert, laughing, "one piece of news follows another, and there is often great dissimilarity between them."
"Ah," said the count, "I see that M. Danglars is accustomed to play at gaining or losing 300,000 francs in a day; he must be enormously rich."
"It is not he who plays!" exclaimed Lucien; "it is Madame Danglars: she is indeed daring."
"But you who are a reasonable being, Lucien, and who know how little dependence is to be placed on the news, since you are at the fountain-head, surely you ought to prevent it," said Morcerf, with a smile.
"How can I, if her husband fails in controlling her?" asked Lucien; "you know the character of the baroness -- no one has any influence with her, and she does precisely what she pleases."
"Ah, if I were in your place" -- said Albert.
"Well?"
"I would reform her; it would be rendering a service to her future son-in-law."
"How would you set about it?"
