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Count of Monte Cristo, The
Chapter 35 - La Mazzolata
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ "Gentlemen," said the Count of Monte Cristo as he entered,
       "I pray you excuse me for suffering my visit to be
       anticipated; but I feared to disturb you by presenting
       myself earlier at your apartments; besides, you sent me word
       that you would come to me, and I have held myself at your
       disposal."
       "Franz and I have to thank you a thousand times, count,"
       returned Albert; "you extricated us from a great dilemma,
       and we were on the point of inventing a very fantastic
       vehicle when your friendly invitation reached us."
       "Indeed," returned the count, motioning the two young men to
       sit down. "It was the fault of that blockhead Pastrini, that
       I did not sooner assist you in your distress. He did not
       mention a syllable of your embarrassment to me, when he
       knows that, alone and isolated as I am, I seek every
       opportunity of making the acquaintance of my neighbors. As
       soon as I learned I could in any way assist you, I most
       eagerly seized the opportunity of offering my services." The
       two young men bowed. Franz had, as yet, found nothing to
       say; he had come to no determination, and as nothing in the
       count's manner manifested the wish that he should recognize
       him, he did not know whether to make any allusion to the
       past, or wait until he had more proof; besides, although
       sure it was he who had been in the box the previous evening,
       he could not be equally positive that this was the man he
       had seen at the Colosseum. He resolved, therefore, to let
       things take their course without making any direct overture
       to the count. Moreover, he had this advantage, he was master
       of the count's secret, while the count had no hold on Franz,
       who had nothing to conceal. However, he resolved to lead the
       conversation to a subject which might possibly clear up his
       doubts.
       "Count," said he, "you have offered us places in your
       carriage, and at your windows in the Rospoli Palace. Can you
       tell us where we can obtain a sight of the Piazza del
       Popolo?"
       "Ah," said the count negligently, looking attentively at
       Morcerf, "is there not something like an execution upon the
       Piazza del Popolo?"
       "Yes," returned Franz, finding that the count was coming to
       the point he wished.
       "Stay, I think I told my steward yesterday to attend to
       this; perhaps I can render you this slight service also." He
       extended his hand, and rang the bell thrice. "Did you ever
       occupy yourself," said he to Franz, "with the employment of
       time and the means of simplifying the summoning your
       servants? I have. When I ring once, it is for my valet;
       twice, for my majordomo; thrice, for my steward, -- thus I
       do not waste a minute or a word. Here he is." A man of about
       forty-five or fifty entered, exactly resembling the smuggler
       who had introduced Franz into the cavern; but he did not
       appear to recognize him. It was evident he had his orders.
       "Monsieur Bertuccio," said the count, "you have procured me
       windows looking on the Piazza del Popolo, as I ordered you
       yesterday "
       "Yes, excellency," returned the steward; "but it was very
       late."
       "Did I not tell you I wished for one?" replied the count,
       frowning.
       "And your excellency has one, which was let to Prince
       Lobanieff; but I was obliged to pay a hundred" --
       "That will do -- that will do, Monsieur Bertuccio; spare
       these gentlemen all such domestic arrangements. You have the
       window, that is sufficient. Give orders to the coachman; and
       be in readiness on the stairs to conduct us to it." The
       steward bowed, and was about to quit the room. "Ah,"
       continued the count, "be good enough to ask Pastrini if he
       has received the tavoletta, and if he can send us an account
       of the execution."
       "There is no need to do that," said Franz, taking out his
       tablets; "for I saw the account, and copied it down."
       "Very well, you can retire, M. Bertuccio; but let us know
       when breakfast is ready. These gentlemen," added he, turning
       to the two friends, "will, I trust, do me the honor to
       breakfast with me?"
       "But, my dear count," said Albert, "we shall abuse your
       kindness."
       "Not at all; on the contrary, you will give me great
       pleasure. You will, one or other of you, perhaps both,
       return it to me at Paris. M. Bertuccio, lay covers for
       three." He then took Franz's tablets out of his hand. "`We
       announce,' he read, in the same tone with which he would
       have read a newspaper, `that to-day, the 23d of February,
       will be executed Andrea Rondolo, guilty of murder on the
       person of the respected and venerated Don Cesare Torlini,
       canon of the church of St. John Lateran, and Peppino, called
       Rocca Priori, convicted of complicity with the detestable
       bandit Luigi Vampa, and the men of his band.' Hum! `The
       first will be mazzolato, the second decapitato.' Yes,"
       continued the count, "it was at first arranged in this way;
       but I think since yesterday some change has taken place in
       the order of the ceremony."
       "Really?" said Franz.
       "Yes, I passed the evening at the Cardinal Rospigliosi's,
       and there mention was made of something like a pardon for
       one of the two men."
       "For Andrea Rondolo?" asked Franz.
       "No," replied the count, carelessly; "for the other (he
       glanced at the tablets as if to recall the name), for
       Peppino, called Rocca Priori. You are thus deprived of
       seeing a man guillotined; but the mazzuola still remains,
       which is a very curious punishment when seen for the first
       time, and even the second, while the other, as you must
       know, is very simple. The mandaia* never fails, never
       trembles, never strikes thirty times ineffectually, like the
       soldier who beheaded the Count of Chalais, and to whose
       tender mercy Richelieu had doubtless recommended the
       sufferer. Ah," added the count, in a contemptuous tone, "do
       not tell me of European punishments, they are in the
       infancy, or rather the old age, of cruelty."
       * Guillotine.
       "Really, count," replied Franz, "one would think that you
       had studied the different tortures of all the nations of the
       world."
       "There are, at least, few that I have not seen," said the
       count coldly.
       "And you took pleasure in beholding these dreadful
       spectacles?"
       "My first sentiment was horror, the second indifference, the
       third curiosity."
       "Curiosity -- that is a terrible word."
       "Why so? In life, our greatest preoccupation is death; is it
       not then, curious to study the different ways by which the
       soul and body can part; and how, according to their
       different characters, temperaments, and even the different
       customs of their countries, different persons bear the
       transition from life to death, from existence to
       annihilation? As for myself, I can assure you of one thing,
       -- the more men you see die, the easier it becomes to die
       yourself; and in my opinion, death may be a torture, but it
       is not an expiation."
       "I do not quite understand you," replied Franz; "pray
       explain your meaning, for you excite my curiosity to the
       highest pitch."
       "Listen," said the count, and deep hatred mounted to his
       face, as the blood would to the face of any other. "If a man
       had by unheard-of and excruciating tortures destroyed your
       father, your mother, your betrothed, -- a being who, when
       torn from you, left a desolation, a wound that never closes,
       in your breast, -- do you think the reparation that society
       gives you is sufficient when it interposes the knife of the
       guillotine between the base of the occiput and the trapezal
       muscles of the murderer, and allows him who has caused us
       years of moral sufferings to escape with a few moments of
       physical pain?"
       "Yes, I know," said Franz, "that human justice is
       insufficient to console us; she can give blood in return for
       blood, that is all; but you must demand from her only what
       it is in her power to grant."
       "I will put another case to you," continued the count; "that
       where society, attacked by the death of a person, avenges
       death by death. But are there not a thousand tortures by
       which a man may be made to suffer without society taking the
       least cognizance of them, or offering him even the
       insufficient means of vengeance, of which we have just
       spoken? Are there not crimes for which the impalement of the
       Turks, the augers of the Persians, the stake and the brand
       of the Iroquois Indians, are inadequate tortures, and which
       are unpunished by society? Answer me, do not these crimes
       exist?"
       "Yes," answered Franz; "and it is to punish them that
       duelling is tolerated."
       "Ah, duelling," cried the count; "a pleasant manner, upon my
       soul, of arriving at your end when that end is vengeance! A
       man has carried off your mistress, a man has seduced your
       wife, a man has dishonored your daughter; he has rendered
       the whole life of one who had the right to expect from
       heaven that portion of happiness God his promised to every
       one of his creatures, an existence of misery and infamy; and
       you think you are avenged because you send a ball through
       the head, or pass a sword through the breast, of that man
       who has planted madness in your brain, and despair in your
       heart. And remember, moreover, that it is often he who comes
       off victorious from the strife, absolved of all crime in the
       eyes of the world. No, no," continued the count, "had I to
       avenge myself, it is not thus I would take revenge."
       "Then you disapprove of duelling? You would not fight a
       duel?" asked Albert in his turn, astonished at this strange
       theory.
       "Oh, yes," replied the count; "understand me, I would fight
       a duel for a trifle, for an insult, for a blow; and the more
       so that, thanks to my skill in all bodily exercises, and the
       indifference to danger I have gradually acquired, I should
       be almost certain to kill my man. Oh, I would fight for such
       a cause; but in return for a slow, profound, eternal
       torture, I would give back the same, were it possible; an
       eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, as the Orientalists
       say, -- our masters in everything, -- those favored
       creatures who have formed for themselves a life of dreams
       and a paradise of realities."
       "But," said Franz to the count, "with this theory, which
       renders you at once judge and executioner of your own cause,
       it would be difficult to adopt a course that would forever
       prevent your falling under the power of the law. Hatred is
       blind, rage carries you away; and he who pours out vengeance
       runs the risk of tasting a bitter draught."
       "Yes, if he be poor and inexperienced, not if he be rich and
       skilful; besides, the worst that could happen to him would
       be the punishment of which we have already spoken, and which
       the philanthropic French Revolution has substituted for
       being torn to pieces by horses or broken on the wheel. What
       matters this punishment, as long as he is avenged? On my
       word, I almost regret that in all probability this miserable
       Peppino will not be beheaded, as you might have had an
       opportunity then of seeing how short a time the punishment
       lasts, and whether it is worth even mentioning; but, really
       this is a most singular conversation for the Carnival,
       gentlemen; how did it arise? Ah, I recollect, you asked for
       a place at my window; you shall have it; but let us first
       sit down to table, for here comes the servant to inform us
       that breakfast is ready." As he spoke, a servant opened one
       of the four doors of the apartment, saying -- "Al suo
       commodo!" The two young men arose and entered the
       breakfast-room.
       During the meal, which was excellent, and admirably served,
       Franz looked repeatedly at Albert, in order to observe the
       impressions which he doubted not had been made on him by the
       words of their entertainer; but whether with his usual
       carelessness he had paid but little attention to him,
       whether the explanation of the Count of Monte Cristo with
       regard to duelling had satisfied him, or whether the events
       which Franz knew of had had their effect on him alone, he
       remarked that his companion did not pay the least regard to
       them, but on the contrary ate like a man who for the last
       four or five months had been condemned to partake of Italian
       cookery -- that is, the worst in the world. As for the
       count, he just touched the dishes; he seemed to fulfil the
       duties of a host by sitting down with his guests, and
       awaited their departure to be served with some strange or
       more delicate food. This brought back to Franz, in spite of
       himself, the recollection of the terror with which the count
       had inspired the Countess G---- , and her firm conviction
       that the man in the opposite box was a vampire. At the end
       of the breakfast Franz took out his watch. "Well," said the
       count, "what are you doing?"
       "You must excuse us, count," returned Franz, "but we have
       still much to do."
       "What may that be?"
       "We have no masks, and it is absolutely necessary to procure
       them."
       "Do not concern yourself about that; we have, I think, a
       private room in the Piazza del Popolo; I will have whatever
       costumes you choose brought to us, and you can dress there."
       "After the execution?" cried Franz.
       "Before or after, whichever you please."
       "Opposite the scaffold?"
       "The scaffold forms part of the fete."
       "Count, I have reflected on the matter," said Franz, "I
       thank you for your courtesy, but I shall content myself with
       accepting a place in your carriage and at your window at the
       Rospoli Palace, and I leave you at liberty to dispose of my
       place at the Piazza del Popolo."
       "But I warn you, you will lose a very curious sight,"
       returned the count.
       "You will describe it to me," replied Franz, "and the
       recital from your lips will make as great an impression on
       me as if I had witnessed it. I have more than once intended
       witnessing an execution, but I have never been able to make
       up my mind; and you, Albert?"
       "I," replied the viscount, -- "I saw Castaing executed, but
       I think I was rather intoxicated that day, for I had quitted
       college the same morning, and we had passed the previous
       night at a tavern."
       "Besides, it is no reason because you have not seen an
       execution at Paris, that you should not see one anywhere
       else; when you travel, it is to see everything. Think what a
       figure you will make when you are asked, `How do they
       execute at Rome?' and you reply, `I do not know'! And,
       besides, they say that the culprit is an infamous scoundrel,
       who killed with a log of wood a worthy canon who had brought
       him up like his own son. Diable, when a churchman is killed,
       it should be with a different weapon than a log, especially
       when he has behaved like a father. If you went to Spain,
       would you not see the bull-fight? Well, suppose it is a
       bull-fight you are going to see? Recollect the ancient
       Romans of the Circus, and the sports where they killed three
       hundred lions and a hundred men. Think of the eighty
       thousand applauding spectators, the sage matrons who took
       their daughters, and the charming Vestals who made with the
       thumb of their white hands the fatal sign that said, `Come,
       despatch the dying.'"
       "Shall you go, then, Albert?" asked Franz.
       "Ma foi, yes; like you, I hesitated, but the count's
       eloquence decides me."
       "Let us go, then," said Franz, "since you wish it; but on
       our way to the Piazza del Popolo, I wish to pass through the
       Corso. Is this possible, count?"
       "On foot, yes, in a carriage, no."
       "I will go on foot, then."
       "Is it important that you should go that way?"
       "Yes, there is something I wish to see."
       "Well, we will go by the Corso. We will send the carriage to
       wait for us on the Piazza del Popolo, by the Strada del
       Babuino, for I shall be glad to pass, myself, through the
       Corso, to see if some orders I have given have been
       executed."
       "Excellency," said a servant, opening the door, "a man in
       the dress of a penitent wishes to speak to you."
       "Ah, yes" returned the count, "I know who he is, gentlemen;
       will you return to the salon? you will find good cigars on
       the centre table. I will be with you directly." The young
       men rose and returned into the salon, while the count, again
       apologizing, left by another door. Albert, who was a great
       smoker, and who had considered it no small sacrifice to be
       deprived of the cigars of the Cafe de Paris, approached the
       table, and uttered a cry of joy at perceiving some veritable
       puros.
       "Well," asked Franz, "what think you of the Count of Monte
       Cristo?"
       "What do I think?" said Albert, evidently surprised at such
       a question from his companion; "I think he is a delightful
       fellow, who does the honors of his table admirably; who has
       travelled much, read much, is, like Brutus, of the Stoic
       school, and moreover," added he, sending a volume of smoke
       up towards the ceiling, "that he has excellent cigars." Such
       was Albert's opinion of the count, and as Franz well knew
       that Albert professed never to form an opinion except upon
       long reflection, he made no attempt to change it. "But,"
       said he, "did you observe one very singular thing?"
       "What?"
       "How attentively he looked at you."
       "At me?"
       "Yes." -- Albert reflected. "Ah," replied he, sighing, "that
       is not very surprising; I have been more than a year absent
       from Paris, and my clothes are of a most antiquated cut; the
       count takes me for a provincial. The first opportunity you
       have, undeceive him, I beg, and tell him I am nothing of the
       kind." Franz smiled; an instant after the count entered.
       "I am now quite at your service, gentlemen," said he. "The
       carriage is going one way to the Piazza del Popolo, and we
       will go another; and, if you please, by the Corso. Take some
       more of these cigars, M. de Morcerf."
       "With all my heart," returned Albert; "Italian cigars are
       horrible. When you come to Paris, I will return all this."
       "I will not refuse; I intend going there soon, and since you
       allow me, I will pay you a visit. Come, we have not any time
       to lose, it is half-past twelve -- let us set off." All
       three descended; the coachman received his master's orders,
       and drove down the Via del Babuino. While the three
       gentlemen walked along the Piazza de Spagni and the Via
       Frattina, which led directly between the Fiano and Rospoli
       palaces, Franz's attention was directed towards the windows
       of that last palace, for he had not forgotten the signal
       agreed upon between the man in the mantle and the
       Transtevere peasant. "Which are your windows?" asked he of
       the count, with as much indifference as he could assume.
       "The three last," returned he, with a negligence evidently
       unaffected, for he could not imagine with what intention the
       question was put. Franz glanced rapidly towards the three
       windows. The side windows were hung with yellow damask, and
       the centre one with white damask and a red cross. The man in
       the mantle had kept his promise to the Transteverin, and
       there could now be no doubt that he was the count. The three
       windows were still untenanted. Preparations were making on
       every side; chairs were placed, scaffolds were raised, and
       windows were hung with flags. The masks could not appear;
       the carriages could not move about; but the masks were
       visible behind the windows, the carriages, and the doors.
       Franz, Albert, and the count continued to descend the Corso.
       As they approached the Piazza del Popolo, the crowd became
       more dense, and above the heads of the multitude two objects
       were visible: the obelisk, surmounted by a cross, which
       marks the centre of the square, and in front of the obelisk,
       at the point where the three streets, del Babuino, del
       Corso, and di Ripetta, meet, the two uprights of the
       scaffold, between which glittered the curved knife of the
       mandaia. At the corner of the street they met the count's
       steward, who was awaiting his master. The window, let at an
       exorbitant price, which the count had doubtless wished to
       conceal from his guests, was on the second floor of the
       great palace, situated between the Via del Babuino and the
       Monte Pincio. It consisted, as we have said, of a small
       dressing-room, opening into a bedroom, and, when the door of
       communication was shut, the inmates were quite alone. On
       chairs were laid elegant masquerade costumes of blue and
       white satin. "As you left the choice of your costumes to
       me," said the count to the two friends, "I have had these
       brought, as they will be the most worn this year; and they
       are most suitable, on account of the confetti (sweetmeats),
       as they do not show the flour."
       Franz heard the words of the count but imperfectly, and he
       perhaps did not fully appreciate this new attention to their
       wishes; for he was wholly absorbed by the spectacle that the
       Piazza del Popolo presented, and by the terrible instrument
       that was in the centre. It was the first time Franz had ever
       seen a guillotine, -- we say guillotine, because the Roman
       mandaia is formed on almost the same model as the French
       instrument.* The knife, which is shaped like a crescent,
       that cuts with the convex side, falls from a less height,
       and that is all the difference. Two men, seated on the
       movable plank on which the victim is laid, were eating their
       breakfasts, while waiting for the criminal. Their repast
       consisted apparently of bread and sausages. One of them
       lifted the plank, took out a flask of wine, drank some, and
       then passed it to his companion. These two men were the
       executioner's assistants. At this sight Franz felt the
       perspiration start forth upon his brow. The prisoners,
       transported the previous evening from the Carcere Nuovo to
       the little church of Santa Maria del Popolo, had passed the
       night, each accompanied by two priests, in a chapel closed
       by a grating, before which were two sentinels, who were
       relieved at intervals. A double line of carbineers, placed
       on each side of the door of the church, reached to the
       scaffold, and formed a circle around it, leaving a path
       about ten feet wide, and around the guillotine a space of
       nearly a hundred feet. All the rest of the square was paved
       with heads. Many women held their infants on their
       shoulders, and thus the children had the best view. The
       Monte Pincio seemed a vast amphitheatre filled with
       spectators; the balconies of the two churches at the corner
       of the Via del Babuino and the Via di Ripetta were crammed;
       the steps even seemed a parti-colored sea, that was impelled
       towards the portico; every niche in the wall held its living
       statue. What the count said was true -- the most curious
       spectacle in life is that of death. And yet, instead of the
       silence and the solemnity demanded by the occasion, laughter
       and jests arose from the crowd. It was evident that the
       execution was, in the eyes of the people, only the
       commencement of the Carnival. Suddenly the tumult ceased, as
       if by magic, and the doors of the church opened. A
       brotherhood of penitents, clothed from head to foot in robes
       of gray sackcloth, with holes for the eyes, and holding in
       their hands lighted tapers, appeared first; the chief
       marched at the head. Behind the penitents came a man of vast
       stature and proportions. He was naked, with the exception of
       cloth drawers at the left side of which hung a large knife
       in a sheath, and he bore on his right shoulder a heavy iron
       sledge-hammer. This man was the executioner. He had,
       moreover, sandals bound on his feet by cords. Behind the
       executioner came, in the order in which they were to die,
       first Peppino and then Andrea. Each was accompanied by two
       priests. Neither had his eyes bandaged. Peppino walked with
       a firm step, doubtless aware of what awaited him. Andrea was
       supported by two priests. Each of them, from time to time,
       kissed the crucifix a confessor held out to them. At this
       sight alone Franz felt his legs tremble under him. He looked
       at Albert -- he was as white as his shirt, and mechanically
       cast away his cigar, although he had not half smoked it. The
       count alone seemed unmoved -- nay, more, a slight color
       seemed striving to rise in his pale cheeks. His nostrils
       dilated like those of a wild beast that scents its prey, and
       his lips, half opened, disclosed his white teeth, small and
       sharp like those of a jackal. And yet his features wore an
       expression of smiling tenderness, such as Franz had never
       before witnessed in them; his black eyes especially were
       full of kindness and pity. However, the two culprits
       advanced, and as they approached their faces became visible.
       Peppino was a handsome young man of four or five and twenty,
       bronzed by the sun; he carried his head erect, and seemed on
       the watch to see on which side his liberator would appear.
       Andrea was short and fat; his visage, marked with brutal
       cruelty, did not indicate age; he might be thirty. In prison
       he had suffered his beard to grow; his head fell on his
       shoulder, his legs bent beneath him, and his movements were
       apparently automatic and unconscious.
       * Dr. Guillotin got the idea of his famous machine from
       witnessing an execution in Italy.
       "I thought," said Franz to the count, "that you told me
       there would be but one execution."
       "I told you true," replied he coldly.
       "And yet here are two culprits."
       "Yes; but only one of these two is about to die; the other
       has many years to live."
       "If the pardon is to come, there is no time to lose."
       "And see, here it is," said the count. At the moment when
       Peppino reached the foot of the mandaia, a priest arrived in
       some haste, forced his way through the soldiers, and,
       advancing to the chief of the brotherhood, gave him a folded
       paper. The piercing eye of Peppino had noticed all. The
       chief took the paper, unfolded it, and, raising his hand,
       "Heaven be praised, and his holiness also," said he in a
       loud voice; "here is a pardon for one of the prisoners!"
       "A pardon!" cried the people with one voice -- "a pardon!"
       At this cry Andrea raised his head. "Pardon for whom?" cried
       he.
       Peppino remained breathless. "A pardon for Peppino, called
       Rocca Priori," said the principal friar. And he passed the
       paper to the officer commanding the carbineers, who read and
       returned it to him.
       "For Peppino!" cried Andrea, who seemed roused from the
       torpor in which he had been plunged. "Why for him and not
       for me? We ought to die together. I was promised he should
       die with me. You have no right to put me to death alone. I
       will not die alone -- I will not!" And he broke from the
       priests struggling and raving like a wild beast, and
       striving desperately to break the cords that bound his
       hands. The executioner made a sign, and his two assistants
       leaped from the scaffold and seized him. "What is going on?"
       asked Franz of the count; for, as all the talk was in the
       Roman dialect, he had not perfectly understood it. "Do you
       not see?" returned the count, "that this human creature who
       is about to die is furious that his fellow-sufferer does not
       perish with him? and, were he able, he would rather tear him
       to pieces with his teeth and nails than let him enjoy the
       life he himself is about to be deprived of. Oh, man, man --
       race of crocodiles," cried the count, extending his clinched
       hands towards the crowd, "how well do I recognize you there,
       and that at all times you are worthy of yourselves!"
       Meanwhile Andrea and the two executioners were struggling on
       the ground, and he kept exclaiming, "He ought to die! -- he
       shall die! -- I will not die alone!"
       "Look, look," cried the count. seizing the young men's hands
       -- "look, for on my soul it is curious. Here is a man who
       had resigned himself to his fate, who was going to the
       scaffold to die -- like a coward, it is true, but he was
       about to die without resistance. Do you know what gave him
       strength? -- do you know what consoled him? It was, that
       another partook of his punishment -- that another partook of
       his anguish -- that another was to die before him. Lead two
       sheep to the butcher's, two oxen to the slaughterhouse, and
       make one of them understand that his companion will not die;
       the sheep will bleat for pleasure, the ox will bellow with
       joy. But man -- man, whom God created in his own image --
       man, upon whom God has laid his first, his sole commandment,
       to love his neighbor -- man, to whom God has given a voice
       to express his thoughts -- what is his first cry when he
       hears his fellow-man is saved? A blasphemy. Honor to man,
       this masterpiece of nature, this king of the creation!" And
       the count burst into a laugh; a terrible laugh, that showed
       he must have suffered horribly to be able thus to laugh.
       However, the struggle still continued, and it was dreadful
       to witness. The people all took part against Andrea, and
       twenty thousand voices cried, "Put him to death! put him to
       death!" Franz sprang back, but the count seized his arm, and
       held him before the window. "What are you doing?" said he.
       "Do you pity him? If you heard the cry of `Mad dog!' you
       would take your gun -- you would unhesitatingly shoot the
       poor beast, who, after all, was only guilty of having been
       bitten by another dog. And yet you pity a man who, without
       being bitten by one of his race, has yet murdered his
       benefactor; and who, now unable to kill any one, because his
       hands are bound, wishes to see his companion in captivity
       perish. No, no -- look, look!"
       The command was needless. Franz was fascinated by the
       horribly spectacle. The two assistants had borne Andrea to
       the scaffold, and there, in spite of his struggles, his
       bites, and his cries, had forced him to his knees. During
       this time the executioner had raised his mace, and signed to
       them to get out of the way; the criminal strove to rise,
       but, ere he had time, the mace fell on his left temple. A
       dull and heavy sound was heard, and the man dropped like an
       ox on his face, and then turned over on his back. The
       executioner let fall his mace, drew his knife, and with one
       stroke opened his throat, and mounting on his stomach,
       stamped violently on it with his feet. At every stroke a jet
       of blood sprang from the wound.
       This time Franz could contain himself no longer, but sank,
       half fainting, into a seat. Albert, with his eyes closed,
       was standing grasping the window-curtains. The count was
       erect and triumphant, like the Avenging Angel! _
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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