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9781593081485

Three Musketeers

Three Musketeers
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  • ISBN-13: 9781593081485
  • ISBN: 1593081480
  • Publication Date: 2004
  • Publisher: Barnes & Noble, Incorporated

AUTHOR

Dumas, Alexandre, Cooper, Barbara T., Cooper, Barbara T.

SUMMARY

From Barbara T. Cooper's Introduction toThe Three Musketeers If Dumas's serialized novel quickly attracted a faithful and fervent audience, it was not only because the author proved to be a master storyteller whose writing was vividly alive with emotions and actions, dialogues and duels, but also because it skillfully combined literary genres then popular with readers. By the time Dumas composedThe Three Musketeers, Honore de Balzac and others had already made the novel of initiation, or Bildungsroman, a familiar and successful form of French realist fiction.The Three Musketeersshares many of the characteristics of that genre. Like most such works, Dumas's story focuses on an inexperienced youth who travels from the provinces to Paris in search of a broader knowledge of the world and in the hope of earning fame or fortune or both. In chapter 1 of Dumas's book, young D'Artagnan leaves his parents' home in southwestern France and sets off on the road to Paris, where he hopes to join the corps of the King's Musketeers. Before D'Artagnan leaves, his father gives him three "gifts"--fifteen crowns; a letter of introduction to Monsieur de Treville, a fellow Gascon and former comrade-in-arms of D'Artagnan pere and now the captain of the Musketeers; and a horse whose peculiar yellow color and old age significantly detract from the young man's image as a noble and dashing hero. He also gives the lad his sword. Together with these items, the senior D'Artagnan offers his son three bits of advice: Never sell this horse; do not brook insults or fear duels for, although by law the latter are illegal, "it is by his . . . courage alone, that a gentleman can make his way nowadays"; and always serve the King and the Cardinal. Soon after leaving home, D'Artagnan's paternally encouraged susceptibility leads him to quarrel with a gentleman whom he will subsequently refer to as "the man from Meung" (the name of the town where they meet and where he also glimpses a beautiful woman addressed as Milady). The encounter does not end well for young D'Artagnan. Not only will he be wounded in the confrontation with the man from Meung; he will also have his letter of introduction taken from him and his sword split in two. Later, when he arrives in Paris, D'Artagnan will already be short of funds and will sell his risible and exhausted horse for cash. That sale provides him with the means to procure inexpensive lodgings and to have a new blade made for his sword. This inauspicious beginning is followed by a series of squabbles with three men (the Musketeers Athos, Porthos, and Aramis) he meets shortly after his arrival in the French capital. He agrees to a duel with each and, with the same brash courage that he has already displayed in Meung, schedules those contests back to back. D'Artagnan's impetuous bravado in these early encounters, along with his ignorance of the codes of behavior and the political rivalries at work in Paris and at the royal court, make it clear that the young man will need more than daring and a certain native intelligence if he is to achieve his goals. He will have to find mentors who can help him understand the complicated relationships, hidden truths, and moral subtleties of modern (that is, seventeenth-century) French life. He finds that help in the form of two surrogate father figures: Monsieur de Treville, the captain of the King's Musketeers, and Athos, the oldest of the three Musketeers with whom he has recently quarreled. D'Artagnan also meets Constance Bonacieux, the young and beautiful wife of his Parisian landlord and laundress to Queen Anne. Constance will not only offer theDumas, Alexandre is the author of 'Three Musketeers', published 2004 under ISBN 9781593081485 and ISBN 1593081480.

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