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Count of Monte Cristo, The
Chapter 60 - The Telegraph
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ M. and Madame de Villefort found on their return that the
       Count of Monte Cristo, who had come to visit them in their
       absence, had been ushered into the drawing-room, and was
       still awaiting them there. Madame de Villefort, who had not
       yet sufficiently recovered from her late emotion to allow of
       her entertaining visitors so immediately, retired to her
       bedroom, while the procureur, who could better depend upon
       himself, proceeded at once to the salon. Although M. de
       Villefort flattered himself that, to all outward view, he
       had completely masked the feelings which were passing in his
       mind, he did not know that the cloud was still lowering on
       his brow, so much so that the count, whose smile was
       radiant, immediately noticed his sombre and thoughtful air.
       "Ma foi," said Monte Cristo, after the first compliments
       were over, "what is the matter with you, M. de Villefort?
       Have I arrived at the moment when you were drawing up an
       indictment for a capital crime?" Villefort tried to smile.
       "No, count," he replied, "I am the only victim in this case.
       It is I who lose my cause, and it is ill-luck, obstinacy,
       and folly which have caused it to be decided against me."
       "To what do you refer?" said Monte Cristo with well-feigned
       interest. "Have you really met with some great misfortune?"
       "Oh, no, monsieur," said Villefort with a bitter smile; "it
       is only a loss of money which I have sustained -- nothing
       worth mentioning, I assure you."
       "True," said Monte Cristo, "the loss of a sum of money
       becomes almost immaterial with a fortune such as you
       possess, and to one of your philosophic spirit."
       "It is not so much the loss of the money that vexes me,"
       said Villefort, "though, after all, 900,000 francs are worth
       regretting; but I am the more annoyed with this fate,
       chance, or whatever you please to call the power which has
       destroyed my hopes and my fortune, and may blast the
       prospects of my child also, as it is all occasioned by an
       old man relapsed into second childhood."
       "What do you say?" said the count; "900,000 francs? It is
       indeed a sum which might be regretted even by a philosopher.
       And who is the cause of all this annoyance?"
       "My father, as I told you."
       "M. Noirtier? But I thought you told me he had become
       entirely paralyzed, and that all his faculties were
       completely destroyed?"
       "Yes, his bodily faculties, for he can neither move nor
       speak, nevertheless he thinks, acts, and wills in the manner
       I have described. I left him about five minutes ago, and he
       is now occupied in dictating his will to two notaries."
       "But to do this he must have spoken?"
       "He has done better than that -- he has made himself
       understood."
       "How was such a thing possible?"
       "By the help of his eyes, which are still full of life, and,
       as you perceive, possess the power of inflicting mortal
       injury."
       "My dear," said Madame de Villefort, who had just entered
       the room, "perhaps you exaggerate the evil."
       "Good-morning, madame," said the count, bowing. Madame de
       Villefort acknowledged the salutation with one of her most
       gracious smiles. "What is this that M. de Villefort has been
       telling me?" demanded Monte Cristo "and what
       incomprehensible misfortune" --
       "Incomprehensible is not the word," interrupted the
       procureur, shrugging his shoulders. "It is an old man's
       caprice."
       "And is there no means of making him revoke his decision?"
       "Yes," said Madame de Villefort; "and it is still entirely
       in the power of my husband to cause the will, which is now
       in prejudice of Valentine, to be altered in her favor." The
       count, who perceived that M. and Madame de Villefort were
       beginning to speak in parables, appeared to pay no attention
       to the conversation, and feigned to be busily engaged in
       watching Edward, who was mischievously pouring some ink into
       the bird's water-glass. "My dear," said Villefort, in answer
       to his wife, "you know I have never been accustomed to play
       the patriarch in my family, nor have I ever considered that
       the fate of a universe was to be decided by my nod.
       Nevertheless, it is necessary that my will should be
       respected in my family, and that the folly of an old man and
       the caprice of a child should not be allowed to overturn a
       project which I have entertained for so many years. The
       Baron d'Epinay was my friend, as you know, and an alliance
       with his son is the most suitable thing that could possibly
       be arranged."
       "Do you think," said Madame de Villefort, "that Valentine is
       in league with him? She has always been opposed to this
       marriage, and I should not be at all surprised if what we
       have just seen and heard is nothing but the execution of a
       plan concerted between them."
       "Madame," said Villefort, "believe me, a fortune of 900,000
       francs is not so easily renounced."
       "She could, nevertheless, make up her mind to renounce the
       world, sir, since it is only about a year ago that she
       herself proposed entering a convent."
       "Never mind," replied Villefort; "I say that this marriage
       shall be consummated."
       "Notwithstanding your father's wishes to the contrary?" said
       Madame de Villefort, selecting a new point of attack. "That
       is a serious thing." Monte Cristo, who pretended not to be
       listening, heard however, every word that was said.
       "Madame," replied Villefort "I can truly say that I have
       always entertained a high respect for my father, because, to
       the natural feeling of relationship was added the
       consciousness of his moral superiority. The name of father
       is sacred in two senses; he should be reverenced as the
       author of our being and as a master whom we ought to obey.
       But, under the present circumstances, I am justified in
       doubting the wisdom of an old man who, because he hated the
       father, vents his anger on the son. It would be ridiculous
       in me to regulate my conduct by such caprices. I shall still
       continue to preserve the same respect toward M. Noirtier; I
       will suffer, without complaint, the pecuniary deprivation to
       which he has subjected me; but I shall remain firm in my
       determination, and the world shall see which party his
       reason on his side. Consequently I shall marry my daughter
       to the Baron Franz d'Epinay, because I consider it would be
       a proper and eligible match for her to make, and, in short,
       because I choose to bestow my daughter's hand on whomever I
       please."
       "What?" said the count, the approbation of whose eye
       Villefort had frequently solicited during this speech.
       "What? Do you say that M. Noirtier disinherits Mademoiselle
       de Villefort because she is going to marry M. le Baron Franz
       d'Epinay?"
       "Yes, sir, that is the reason," said Villefort, shrugging
       his shoulders.
       "The apparent reason, at least," said Madame de Villefort.
       "The real reason, madame, I can assure you; I know my
       father."
       "But I want to know in what way M. d'Epinay can have
       displeased your father more than any other person?"
       "I believe I know M. Franz d'Epinay," said the count; "is he
       not the son of General de Quesnel, who was created Baron
       d'Epinay by Charles X.?"
       "The same," said Villefort.
       "Well, but he is a charming young man, according to my
       ideas."
       "He is, which makes me believe that it is only an excuse of
       M. Noirtier to prevent his granddaughter marrying; old men
       are always so selfish in their affection," said Madame de
       Villefort.
       "But," said Monte Cristo "do you not know any cause for this
       hatred?"
       "Ah, ma foi, who is to know?"
       "Perhaps it is some political difference?"
       "My father and the Baron d'Epinay lived in the stormy times
       of which I only saw the ending," said Villefort.
       "Was not your father a Bonapartist?" asked Monte Cristo; "I
       think I remember that you told me something of that kind."
       "My father has been a Jacobin more than anything else," said
       Villefort, carried by his emotion beyond the bounds of
       prudence; "and the senator's robe, which Napoleon cast on
       his shoulders, only served to disguise the old man without
       in any degree changing him. When my father conspired, it was
       not for the emperor, it was against the Bourbons; for M.
       Noirtier possessed this peculiarity, he never projected any
       Utopian schemes which could never be realized, but strove
       for possibilities, and he applied to the realization of
       these possibilities the terrible theories of The Mountain,
       -- theories that never shrank from any means that were
       deemed necessary to bring about the desired result."
       "Well," said Monte Cristo, "it is just as I thought; it was
       politics which brought Noirtier and M. d'Epinay into
       personal contact. Although General d'Epinay served under
       Napoleon, did he not still retain royalist sentiments? And
       was he not the person who was assassinated one evening on
       leaving a Bonapartist meeting to which he had been invited
       on the supposition that he favored the cause of the
       emperor?" Villefort looked at the count almost with terror.
       "Am I mistaken, then?" said Monte Cristo.
       "No, sir, the facts were precisely what you have stated,"
       said Madame de Villefort; "and it was to prevent the renewal
       of old feuds that M. de Villefort formed the idea of uniting
       in the bonds of affection the two children of these
       inveterate enemies."
       "It was a sublime and charitable thought," said Monte
       Cristo, "and the whole world should applaud it. It would be
       noble to see Mademoiselle Noirtier de Villefort assuming the
       title of Madame Franz d'Epinay." Villefort shuddered and
       looked at Monte Cristo as if he wished to read in his
       countenance the real feelings which had dictated the words
       he had just uttered. But the count completely baffled the
       procureur, and prevented him from discovering anything
       beneath the never-varying smile he was so constantly in the
       habit of assuming. "Although," said Villefort, "it will be a
       serious thing for Valentine to lose her grandfather's
       fortune, I do not think that M. d'Epinay will be frightened
       at this pecuniary loss. He will, perhaps, hold me in greater
       esteem than the money itself, seeing that I sacrifice
       everything in order to keep my word with him. Besides, he
       knows that Valentine is rich in right of her mother, and
       that she will, in all probability, inherit the fortune of M.
       and Madame de Saint-Meran, her mother's parents, who both
       love her tenderly."
       "And who are fully as well worth loving and tending as M.
       Noirtier," said Madame de Villefort; "besides, they are to
       come to Paris in about a month, and Valentine, after the
       affront she has received, need not consider it necessary to
       continue to bury herself alive by being shut up with M.
       Noirtier." The count listened with satisfaction to this tale
       of wounded self-love and defeated ambition. "But it seems to
       me," said Monte Cristo, "and I must begin by asking your
       pardon for what I am about to say, that if M. Noirtier
       disinherits Mademoiselle de Villefort because she is going
       to marry a man whose father he detested, he cannot have the
       same cause of complaint against this dear Edward."
       "True," said Madame de Villefort, with an intonation of
       voice which it is impossible to describe; "is it not unjust
       -- shamefully unjust? Poor Edward is as much M. Noirtier's
       grandchild as Valentine, and yet, if she had not been going
       to marry M. Franz, M. Noirtier would have left her all his
       money; and supposing Valentine to be disinherited by her
       grandfather, she will still be three times richer than he."
       The count listened and said no more. "Count," said
       Villefort, "we will not entertain you any longer with our
       family misfortunes. It is true that my patrimony will go to
       endow charitable institutions, and my father will have
       deprived me of my lawful inheritance without any reason for
       doing so, but I shall have the satisfaction of knowing that
       I have acted like a man of sense and feeling. M. d'Epinay,
       to whom I had promised the interest of this sum, shall
       receive it, even if I endure the most cruel privations."
       "However," said Madame de Villefort, returning to the one
       idea which incessantly occupied her mind, "perhaps it would
       be better to explain this unlucky affair to M. d'Epinay, in
       order to give him the opportunity of himself renouncing his
       claim to the hand of Mademoiselle de Villefort."
       "Ah, that would be a great pity," said Villefort.
       "A great pity," said Monte Cristo.
       "Undoubtedly," said Villefort, moderating the tones of his
       voice, "a marriage once concerted and then broken off,
       throws a sort of discredit on a young lady; then again, the
       old reports, which I was so anxious to put an end to, will
       instantly gain ground. No, it will all go well; M. d'Epinay,
       if he is an honorable man, will consider himself more than
       ever pledged to Mademoiselle de Villefort, unless he were
       actuated by a decided feeling of avarice, but that is
       impossible."
       "I agree with M. de Villefort," said Monte Cristo, fixing
       his eyes on Madame de Villefort; "and if I were sufficiently
       intimate with him to allow of giving my advice, I would
       persuade him, since I have been told M. d'Epinay is coming
       back, to settle this affair at once beyond all possibility
       of revocation. I will answer for the success of a project
       which will reflect so much honor on M. de Villefort." The
       procureur arose, delighted with the proposition, but his
       wife slightly changed color. "Well, that is all that I
       wanted, and I will be guided by a counsellor such as you
       are," said he, extending his hand to Monte Cristo.
       "Therefore let every one here look upon what has passed
       to-day as if it had not happened, and as though we had never
       thought of such a thing as a change in our original plans."
       "Sir," said the count, "the world, unjust as it is, will be
       pleased with your resolution; your friends will be proud of
       you, and M. d'Epinay, even if he took Mademoiselle de
       Villefort without any dowry, which he will not do, would be
       delighted with the idea of entering a family which could
       make such sacrifices in order to keep a promise and fulfil a
       duty." At the conclusion of these words, the count rose to
       depart. "Are you going to leave us, count?" said Madame de
       Villefort.
       "I am sorry to say I must do so, madame, I only came to
       remind you of your promise for Saturday."
       "Did you fear that we should forget it?"
       "You are very good, madame, but M. de Villefort has so many
       important and urgent occupations."
       "My husband has given me his word, sir," said Madame de
       Villefort; "you have just seen him resolve to keep it when
       he has everything to lose, and surely there is more reason
       for his doing so where he has everything to gain."
       "And," said Villefort, "is it at your house in the
       Champs-Elysees that you receive your visitors?"
       "No," said Monte Cristo, "which is precisely the reason
       which renders your kindness more meritorious, -- it is in
       the country."
       "In the country?"
       "Yes."
       "Where is it, then? Near Paris, is it not?"
       "Very near, only half a league from the Barriers, -- it is
       at Auteuil."
       "At Auteuil?" said Villefort; "true, Madame de Villefort
       told me you lived at Auteuil, since it was to your house
       that she was taken. And in what part of Auteuil do you
       reside?"
       "Rue de la Fontaine."
       "Rue de la Fontaine!" exclaimed Villefort in an agitated
       tone; "at what number?"
       "No. 28."
       "Then," cried Villefort, "was it you who bought M. de
       Saint-Meran's house!"
       "Did it belong to M. de Saint-Meran?" demanded Monte Cristo.
       "Yes," replied Madame de Villefort; "and, would you believe
       it, count" --
       "Believe what?"
       "You think this house pretty, do you not?"
       "I think it charming."
       "Well, my husband would never live in it."
       "Indeed?" returned Monte Cristo, "that is a prejudice on
       your part, M. de Villefort, for which I am quite at a loss
       to account."
       "I do not like Auteuil, sir," said the procureur, making an
       evident effort to appear calm.
       "But I hope you will not carry your antipathy so far as to
       deprive me of the pleasure of your company, sir," said Monte
       Cristo.
       "No, count, -- I hope -- I assure you I shall do my best,"
       stammered Villefort.
       "Oh," said Monte Cristo, "I allow of no excuse. On Saturday,
       at six o'clock. I shall be expecting you, and if you fail to
       come, I shall think -- for how do I know to the contrary? --
       that this house, which his remained uninhabited for twenty
       years, must have some gloomy tradition or dreadful legend
       connected with it."
       "I will come, count, -- I will be sure to come," said
       Villefort eagerly.
       "Thank you," said Monte Cristo; "now you must permit me to
       take my leave of you."
       "You said before that you were obliged to leave us,
       monsieur," said Madame de Villefort, "and you were about to
       tell us why when your attention was called to some other
       subject."
       "Indeed madame," said Monte Cristo: "I scarcely know if I
       dare tell you where I am going."
       "Nonsense; say on."
       "Well, then, it is to see a thing on which I have sometimes
       mused for hours together."
       "What is it?"
       "A telegraph. So now I have told my secret."
       "A telegraph?" repeated Madame de Villefort.
       "Yes, a telegraph. I had often seen one placed at the end of
       a road on a hillock, and in the light of the sun its black
       arms, bending in every direction, always reminded me of the
       claws of an immense beetle, and I assure you it was never
       without emotion that I gazed on it, for I could not help
       thinking how wonderful it was that these various signs
       should be made to cleave the air with such precision as to
       convey to the distance of three hundred leagues the ideas
       and wishes of a man sitting at a table at one end of the
       line to another man similarly placed at the opposite
       extremity, and all this effected by a simple act of volition
       on the part of the sender of the message. I began to think
       of genii, sylphs, gnomes, in short, of all the ministers of
       the occult sciences, until I laughed aloud at the freaks of
       my own imagination. Now, it never occurred to me to wish for
       a nearer inspection of these large insects, with their long
       black claws, for I always feared to find under their stone
       wings some little human genius fagged to death with cabals,
       factions, and government intrigues. But one fine day I
       learned that the mover of this telegraph was only a poor
       wretch, hired for twelve hundred francs a year, and employed
       all day, not in studying the heavens like an astronomer, or
       in gazing on the water like an angler, or even in enjoying
       the privilege of observing the country around him, but all
       his monotonous life was passed in watching his
       white-bellied, black-clawed fellow insect, four or five
       leagues distant from him. At length I felt a desire to study
       this living chrysalis more closely, and to endeavor to
       understand the secret part played by these insect-actors
       when they occupy themselves simply with pulling different
       pieces of string."
       "And are you going there?"
       "I am."
       "What telegraph do you intend visiting? that of the home
       department, or of the observatory?"
       "Oh, no; I should find there people who would force me to
       understand things of which I would prefer to remain
       ignorant, and who would try to explain to me, in spite of
       myself, a mystery which even they do not understand. Ma foi,
       I should wish to keep my illusions concerning insects
       unimpaired; it is quite enough to have those dissipated
       which I had formed of my fellow-creatures. I shall,
       therefore, not visit either of these telegraphs, but one in
       the open country where I shall find a good-natured
       simpleton, who knows no more than the machine he is employed
       to work."
       "You are a singular man," said Villefort.
       "What line would you advise me to study?"
       "The one that is most in use just at this time."
       "The Spanish one, you mean, I suppose?"
       "Yes; should you like a letter to the minister that they
       might explain to you" --
       "No," said Monte Cristo; "since, as I told you before, I do
       not wish to comprehend it. The moment I understand it there
       will no longer exist a telegraph for me; it will he nothing
       more than a sign from M. Duchatel, or from M. Montalivet,
       transmitted to the prefect of Bayonne, mystified by two
       Greek words, tele, graphein. It is the insect with black
       claws, and the awful word which I wish to retain in my
       imagination in all its purity and all its importance."
       "Go then; for in the course of two hours it will be dark,
       and you will not be able to see anything."
       "Ma foi, you frighten me. Which is the nearest way?
       Bayonne?"
       "Yes; the road to Bayonne."
       "And afterwards the road to Chatillon?"
       "Yes."
       "By the tower of Montlhery, you mean?"
       "Yes."
       "Thank you. Good-by. On Saturday I will tell you my
       impressions concerning the telegraph." At the door the count
       was met by the two notaries, who had just completed the act
       which was to disinherit Valentine, and who were leaving
       under the conviction of having done a thing which could not
       fail of redounding considerably to their credit. _
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本书目录

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