The Three Musketeers
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- For other uses, see The Three Musketeers (disambiguation).
Image:Dartagnan-musketeers.jpg The Three Musketeers (Les Trois Mousquetaires) is a novel by Alexandre Dumas, père. It recounts the adventures of a young man called d'Artagnan after he leaves home to become a musketeer. D'Artagnan is not one of the musketeers of the title; those are his friends Athos, Porthos, and Aramis.
The story of d'Artagnan is continued in Twenty Years After and The Vicomte de Bragelonne. Those three novels by Dumas are together known as d'Artagnan Romances.
The Three Musketeers was first published in serial form in the magazine Le Siècle between March and July 1844. Dumas claimed it was based on manuscripts he had discovered in the Bibliothèque Nationale. It was later proven that Dumas had based his work on the book Mémoires de Monsieur d'Artagnan, capitaine lieutenant de la première compagnie des Mousquetaires du Roi (Memories of Mister d'Artagnan, Lieutenant Captain of the first company of the King's Musketeers) by Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras (Cologne, 1700). The book was borrowed from the Marseille public library, and the card-index remains to this day; Dumas kept the book when he went back to Paris.
Dumas' version of the story covers the adventures of d'Artagnan and his friends from 1626 to 1628, as they are involved in intrigues involving the weak King Louis XIII of France, his powerful and cunning advisor Cardinal Richelieu, the beautiful Queen Anne of Austria, her English lover, George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, and the siege of the rebellious Huguenot city of La Rochelle. Adding to the intrigue are the mysterious Milady de Winter, and Richelieu's right-hand man, Comte de Rochefort.
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The story
The main character, d'Artagnan, comes from a noble but impoverished family from Gascony. In April 1625, he leaves home in order to get to Paris and fulfill his greatest dream: to become a musketeer. On his way, he has an argument with a mysterious man with a black cape and a scar on his face. Later, he realizes that the man has stolen his letter of introduction for M. de Treville, the captain of the musketeers.
In Paris, d'Artagnan goes to visit M. de Treville, but without the letter, he is received very coldly. The same day, due to his pride, d'Artagnan is challenged to duel by three musketeers: Athos, Porthos, and Aramis, who happen to be very close friends. The four men meet and d'Artagnan starts fighting Athos. They are interrupted by some of the Cardinal's guards, who threaten to arrest them, for duels are forbidden. The three musketeers and d'Artagnan fight the guards and defeat them. In this manner, the young Gascon earns the grace of M. de Treville and the friendship of Athos, Porthos and Aramis, and becomes a soldier in the Royal Guard.
Some time later, he meets his landlord's wife, Constance Bonacieux, with whom he falls in love. She is very close to the Queen, Anne of Austria. Unhappy in her marriage with Louis XIII, the Queen is in love with the English Prime-Minister, the Duke of Buckingham. Constance and d'Artagnan help them meet, and the Queen gives her lover some diamond jewels orgininally given to her by her husband the King. However Cardinal de Richelieu, informed by his spies of the gift, persuades the King to invite the Queen to a ball where she would be expected to wear the diamonds.
D'Artagnan and his friends leave for London to get the diamonds back from Buckingham. The voyage is full of dangers set by the Cardinal. Athos, Porthos and Aramis are wounded on the way and forced to stop; only d'Artagnan arrives in England. He retrieves the jewels and returns them to Queen Anne, just in time to save her honour.
The Cardinal's revenge comes swiftly: the next evening, Constance is kidnapped. D'Artagnan brings his friends back to Paris and tries to find her, but fails. Meanwhile, he befriends the Count of Winter, an English nobleman who introduces him to his sister-in-law, Milady de Winter. Despite his love for Constance and his suspicions that Milady is the Cardinal's spy, he finds it very hard to resist her charms. He almost falls into the trap, believing the Countess of Winter is in love with him, when he accidentally finds a letter of hers to the one she really loves, the Count de Wardes. Helped by Milady's chambermaid Kitty, who is in love with him, d'Artagnan has his revenge: he spends a night with Milady, pretending to be M. de Wardes. He then tells her the truth, and she tries to kill him with a dagger. In the struggle, d'Artagnan discovers that Milady has a fleur-de-lis marked on her shoulder, the sign of a great crime she had once committed. Remembering a story that Athos had once told him, d'Artagnan suddenly realizes with horror that Milady is not, as he thought, an English noble lady, but in fact Athos' wife, whom everyone thought dead. He now knows that Milady will never forgive him for having insulted her so dearly, and is relieved to go to La Rochelle where the siege has started, and fight together with his friends.
D'Artagnan thinks that, being far from Paris, he will also be far from Milady's revenge, but he is wrong: she tries to kill him three times. At the same time, d'Artagnan finds out that the Queen has managed to save Constance from the prison where the Cardinal and Milady had thrown her, and that his beloved is now hidden somewhere in a safe place.
Meanwhile, in an inn near La Rochelle, Athos, Porthos and Aramis accidentally overhear a conversation between the Cardinal and Milady: Richelieu orders the Countess to go to England and kill the Duke of Buckingham, and in exchange, she asks him to "take care" of d'Artagnan. The four friends decide to attempt to save the Duke, so they write their friend the Count of Winter (who had returned to England after the war started) and ask him to stop his sister-in-law. The Count listens to their advice and kidnaps Milady, holding her prisoner in one of his castles under the guard of a soldier named Felton.
In the meantime, at La Rochelle, the Cardinal himself admires d'Artagnan's courage in the fights and suggests that M. de Treville admit him among the musketeers. Thus, d'Artagnan's greatest dream comes true and he is extremely happy, for, in addition, the Queen has finally agreed to tell him where Constance is hiding: she is in a monastery near Bethune, in northern France. D'Artagnan and his friends leave for Bethune to find Constance.
However, meanwhile in England: Milady has seduced Felton and convinced him not only to help her escape, but also to kill the Duke of Buckingham. While the naive Felton is committing the crime, Milady returns to France. She writes to the Cardinal to announce that his orders have been fulfilled and she looks for a safe place where she could stay until she received her payment for the crime. As Fate would have it Milady hides in the same monastery where Constance had been sent by the Queen. Not knowing who this stranger really was, the honest Constance opened her soul to Milady. Thus, the Countess finds out that d'Artagnan is expected to arrive at the monastery at any moment. She flees just before his arrival, but not before taking her revenge on d'Artagnan: she poisons Constance, who dies several minutes later in the arms of her beloved d'Artagnan. But the Countess doesn't remain unpunished: the musketeers soon discover the house where she hid after leaving the monastery and bring an executioner who kills her.
After Milady's death, the musketeers return to La Rochelle. On their way, they meet the Count of Rochefort, the Cardinal's close advisor, who was going to Milady to pay her, not yet aware that she is dead. Rochefort, who is none other than the man in the black cape, who stole d'Artagnan's letter near the beginning, also has an order to arrest d'Artagnan if he happens to find him. As they are near La Rochelle, he decides to postpone his voyage to Milady in order to take d'Artagnan to the Cardinal. The young musketeer tells the whole truth to Richelieu, who is in some way relieved to get rid of a servant as dangerous as Milady, and decides to forgive d'Artagnan. Not only does he spare his life, but he also promotes him to the rank of lieutenant of musketeers. He is the only one of the four friends that remains in the army: Athos retires to his estates, Porthos marries a rich widow and established himself somewhere in the countryside, and Aramis becomes a priest. Their lives, however, would cross once again, Twenty Years After.
Adaptations
See The Three Musketeers (film) for a list of adaptions.
Trivia
A little known fact: the original name Dumas planned for the character now known as d'Artagnan, was in fact Nathaniel d'Artagnan. A preliminary draft was submitted to Le Siècle magazine, to which Dumas was requesting suggestion for the name, as he was not yet satisfied with "Nathaniel d'Artagnan." Jacques-Henri Lartigue of Le Siècle made the suggestion to Dumas of dropping "Nathaniel" leaving simply, d'Artagnan.
Although Milady de Winter's meeting with John Felton is fiction, the murder of the Duke of Buckingham by Felton is historical fact.
External links
- Text of the novel (in French)
- Template:Gutenberg
- eLook Literature: The Three Musketeers - HTML version broken down chapter by chapter.
- Read The Three Musketeers online in HTML format broken down page by page.cs:Tři mušketýři
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