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Forty-Five Guardsmen, The
Chapter 3. The Examination
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ CHAPTER III. THE EXAMINATION
       The process of examination consisted in comparing the half card with another half in the possession of the officer.
       The Gascon with the bare head advanced first.
       "Your name?" said De Loignac.
       "It is on the card."
       "Never mind; tell it to me."
       "Well, I am called Perducas de Pincornay."
       Then, throwing his eyes on the card. M. de Loignac read. "Perducas de Pincornay, 26 October, 1585, at noon precisely. Porte St. Antoine."
       "Very good; it is all right," said he, "enter. Now for you," said he to the second.
       The man with the cuirass advanced.
       "Your card?" said De Loignac.
       "What! M. de Loignac, do you not know the son of your old friend, whom you have danced twenty times on your knee?"--"No."
       "I am Pertinax de Montcrabeau," replied the young man, with astonishment. "Do you not know me now?"
       "When I am on service, I know no one. Your card, monsieur?"
       He held it out. "All right! pass," said De Loignac.
       The third now approached, whose card was demanded in the same terms. The man plunged his hand into a little goatskin pouch which he wore, but in vain; he was so embarrassed by the child in his arms, that he could not find it.
       "What the devil are you doing with that child?" asked De Loignac.
       "He is my son, monsieur."
       "Well; put your son down. You are married, then?"---"Yes, monsieur."
       "At twenty?"
       "They marry young among us; you ought to know that, M. de Loignac, who were married at eighteen."
       "Oh!" thought De Loignac, "here is another who knows me."
       "And why should he not be married?" cried the woman advancing. "Yes, monsieur, he is married, and here are two other children who call him father, besides this great lad behind. Advance, Militor, and bow to M. de Loignac."
       A lad of sixteen, vigorous and agile, with an incipient mustache, stepped forward.
       "They are my wife's sons, monsieur."
       "In Heaven's name, your card!" cried De Loignac.
       "Lardille!" cried the Gascon to his wife, "come and help me."
       Lardille searched the pouch and pockets of her husband, but uselessly. "We must have lost it!" she cried.
       "Then I arrest you."
       The man turned pale, but said, "I am Eustache de Miradoux, and M. de St. Maline is my patron."
       "Oh!" said De Loignac, a little mollified at this name, "well, search again."
       They turned to their pockets again, and began to re-examine them.
       "Why, what do I see there, on the sleeve of that blockhead?" said De Loignac.
       "Yes, yes!" cried the father. "I remember, now, Lardille sewed it on."
       "That you might carry something, I suppose, you great lazy fellow."
       The card was looked at and found all right, and the family passed on in the same order as before.
       The fourth man advanced and gave his name as Chalabre. It was found correct, and he also entered.
       Then came M. de Carmainges. He got off his horse and presented his card, while the page hid his face by pretending to adjust the saddle.
       "The page belongs to you?" asked De Loignac.
       "You see, he is attending to my horse."
       "Pass, then."
       "Quick, my master," said the page.
       Behind these men the door was closed, much to the discontent of the crowd. Robert Briquet, meanwhile, had drawn near to the porter's lodge, which had two windows, one looking toward Paris and the other into the country. From this post he saw a man, who, coming from Paris at full gallop, entered the lodge and said, "Here I am, M. de Loignac."
       "Good. Where do you come from?"
       "From the Porte St. Victor."
       "Your number?"--"Five."
       "The cards?"
       "Here they are."
       De Loignac took them, examined them, and wrote on a slate the number five. The messenger left, and two others appeared, almost immediately. One came from the Porte Bourdelle, and brought the number four, the other from the Porte du Temple, and announced six. Then came four others. The first from the Porte St. Denis, with the number five; the next from the Porte St. Jacques, with the number three; the third from the Porte St. Honore, with the number eight; and the fourth from the Porte Montmartre, with the number four. Lastly came a messenger, from the Porte Bussy, who announced four. De Loignac wrote all these down, added them to those who had entered the Porte St. Antoine, and found the total number to be forty-five.
       "Good!" said he. "Now open the gates, and all may enter."
       The gates were thrown open, and then horses, mules, and carts, men, women, and children, pressed into Paris, at the risk of suffocating each other, and in a quarter of an hour all the crowd had vanished.
       Robert Briquet remained until the last. "I have seen enough," said he: "would it be very advantageous to me to see M. Salcede torn in four pieces? No, pardieu! Besides, I have renounced politics; I will go and dine." _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. The Porte St. Antoine
Chapter 2. What Passed Outside The Porte St. Antoine
Chapter 3. The Examination
Chapter 4. His Majesty Henri The Third
Chapter 5. The Execution
Chapter 6. The Brothers
Chapter 7. "The Sword Of The Brave Chevalier"
Chapter 8. The Gascon
Chapter 9. M. De Loignac
Chapter 10. The Purchase Of Cuirasses
Chapter 11 Still The League
Chapter 12. The Chamber Of His Majesty Henri III
Chapter 13. The Dormitory
Chapter 14. The Shade Of Chicot
Chapter 15. The Difficulty Of Finding A Good Ambassador
Chapter 16. The Serenade
Chapter 17. Chicot's Purse
Chapter 18. The Priory Of The Jacobins
Chapter 19. The Two Friends
Chapter 20. The Breakfast
Chapter 21. Brother Borromee
Chapter 22. The Lesson
Chapter 23. The Penitent
Chapter 24. The Ambush
Chapter 25. The Guises
Chapter 26. The Louvre
Chapter 27. The Revelation
Chapter 28. Two Friends
Chapter 29. St. Maline
Chapter 30. De Loignac's Interview With The Forty-Five
Chapter 31. The Bourgeois Of Paris
Chapter 32. Brother Borromee
Chapter 33. Chicot, Latinist
Chapter 34. The Four Winds
Chapter 35. How Chicot Continued His Journey, And What Happened To Him
Chapter 36. The Third Day Of The Journey
Chapter 37. Ernanton De Carmainges
Chapter 38. The Stable-Yard
Chapter 39. The Seven Sins Of Magdalene
Chapter 40. Bel-Esbat
Chapter 41. The Letter Of M. De Mayenne
Chapter 42. How Dom Gorenflot Blessed The King...
Chapter 43. How Chicot Blessed King Louis II
Chapter 44. How The King Of Navarre Guesses...
Chapter 45. The Avenue Three Thousand Feet Long
Chapter 46. Marguerite's Room
Chapter 47. The Explanation
Chapter 48. The Spanish Ambassador
Chapter 49. The Poor Of Henri Of Navarre
Chapter 50. The True Mistress Of The King Of Navarre
Chapter 51. Chicot's Astonishment At Finding Himself...
Chapter 52. How They Hunted The Wolf In Navarre
Chapter 53. How Henri Of Navarre Behaved In Battle
Chapter 54. What Was Passing At The Louvre...
Chapter 55. Red Plume And White Plume
Chapter 56. The Door Opens
Chapter 57. How A Great Lady Loved In The Year 1586
Chapter 58. How St. Maline Entered Into The Turret, And What Followed
Chapter 59. What Was Passing In The Mysterious House
Chapter 60. The Laboratory
Chapter 61. What Monseigneur Francois...
Chapter 62. Preparations For Battle
Chapter 63. Monseigneur
Chapter 64. Monseigneur
Chapter 65. French And Flemings
Chapter 66. The Travelers
Chapter 67. Explanation
Chapter 68. The Water
Chapter 69. Flight
Chapter 70. Transfiguration
Chapter 71. The Two Brothers
Chapter 72. The Expedition
Chapter 73. Paul-Emile
Chapter 74. One Of The Souvenirs Of The Duc D'anjou
Chapter 75. How Aurilly Executed The Commission Of The Duc D'anjou
Chapter 76. The Journey
Chapter 77. How King Henri III Did Not Invite Crillon...
Chapter 78. How, After Receiving News From The South...
Chapter 79. The Two Companions
Chapter 80. The Corne D'abondance
Chapter 81. What Happened In The Little Room
Chapter 82. The Husband And The Lover
Chapter 83. Showing How Chicot Began To Understand...
Chapter 84. Le Cardinal De Joyeuse
Chapter 85. News From Aurilly
Chapter 86. Doubt
Chapter 87. Certainty
Chapter 88. Fatality.
Chapter 89. Les Hospitalieres
Chapter 90. His Highness Monseigneur Le Duc De Guise