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Table of Contents

  1. Titlepage
  2. Imprint
  3. I: The Ghost of Cardinal Richelieu
  4. II: A Nightly Patrol
  5. III: Dead Animosities
  6. IV: Anne of Austria at the Age of Forty-Six
  7. V: The Gascon and the Italian
  8. VI: D’Artagnan in His Fortieth Year
  9. VII: Touches Upon the Strange Effects a Half-Pistole May Have Upon a Beadle and a Chorister
  10. VIII: How d’Artagnan, on Going to a Distance to Discover Aramis, Discovers His Old Friend on Horseback Behind His Own Planchet
  11. IX: The Abbé d’Herblay
  12. X: Monsieur Porthos du Vallon de Bracieux de Pierrefonds
  13. XI: How d’Artagnan, in Discovering the Retreat of Porthos, Perceives That Wealth Does Not Necessarily Produce Happiness
  14. XII: In Which It Is Shown That if Porthos Was Discontented with His Condition, Mousqueton Was Completely Satisfied with His
  15. XIII: Two Angelic Faces
  16. XIV: The Castle of Bragelonne
  17. XV: Athos as a Diplomatist
  18. XVI: The Duc de Beaufort
  19. XVII: Describes How the Duc de Beaufort Amused His Leisure Hours in the Donjon of Vincennes
  20. XVIII: Grimaud Begins His Functions
  21. XIX: In Which the Contents of the Pâtés Made by the Successor of Father Marteau Are Described
  22. XX: One of Marie Michon’s Adventures
  23. XXI: The Abbé Scarron
  24. XXII: Saint Denis
  25. XXIII: One of the Forty Methods of Escape of the Duc de Beaufort
  26. XXIV: The Timely Arrival of d’Artagnan in Paris
  27. XXV: An Adventure on the High Road
  28. XXVI: The Rencontre
  29. XXVII: The Four Old Friends Prepare to Meet Again
  30. XXVIII: The Place Royale
  31. XXIX: The Ferry Across the Oise
  32. XXX: Skirmishing
  33. XXXI: The Monk
  34. XXXII: The Absolution
  35. XXXIII: Grimaud Speaks
  36. XXXIV: On the Eve of Battle
  37. XXXV: A Dinner in the Old Style
  38. XXXVI: A Letter from Charles the First
  39. XXXVII: Cromwell’s Letter
  40. XXXVIII: Henrietta Maria and Mazarin
  41. XXXIX: How, Sometimes, the Unhappy Mistake Chance for Providence
  42. XL: Uncle and Nephew
  43. XLI: Paternal Affection
  44. XLII: Another Queen in Want of Help
  45. XLIII: In Which It Is Proved That First Impulses Are Oftentimes the Best
  46. XLIV: Te Deum for the Victory of Lens
  47. XLV: The Beggar of St. Eustache
  48. XLVI: The Tower of St. Jacques de la Boucherie
  49. XLVII: The Riot
  50. XLVIII: The Riot Becomes a Revolution
  51. XLIX: Misfortune Refreshes the Memory
  52. L: The Interview
  53. LI: The Flight
  54. LII: The Carriage of Monsieur le Coadjuteur
  55. LIII: How d’Artagnan and Porthos Earned by Selling Straw, the One Two Hundred and Nineteen, and the Other Two Hundred and Fifteen Louis d’Or
  56. LIV: In Which We Hear Tidings of Aramis
  57. LV: The Scotchman
  58. LVI: The Avenger
  59. LVII: Oliver Cromwell
  60. LVIII: Jésus Seigneur
  61. LIX: In Which It Is Shown That Under the Most Trying Circumstances Noble Natures Never Lose Their Courage, nor Good Stomachs Their Appetites
  62. LX: Respect to Fallen Majesty
  63. LXI: D’Artagnan Hits on a Plan
  64. LXII: London
  65. LXIII: The Trial
  66. LXIV: Whitehall
  67. LXV: The Workmen
  68. LXVI: Remember!
  69. LXVII: The Man in the Mask
  70. LXVIII: Cromwell’s House
  71. LXIX: Conversational
  72. LXX: The Skiff Lightning
  73. LXXI: Port Wine
  74. LXXII: End of the Port Wine Mystery
  75. LXXIII: Fatality
  76. LXXIV: How Mousqueton, After Being Very Nearly Roasted, Had a Narrow Escape of Being Eaten
  77. LXXV: The Return
  78. LXXVI: The Ambassadors
  79. LXXVII: The Three Lieutenants of the Generalissimo
  80. LXXVIII: The Battle of Charenton
  81. LXXIX: The Road to Picardy
  82. LXXX: The Gratitude of Anne of Austria
  83. LXXXI: Cardinal Mazarin as King
  84. LXXXII: Precautions
  85. LXXXIII: Strength and Sagacity
  86. LXXXIV: Strength and Sagacity—Continued
  87. LXXXV: The Oubliettes of Cardinal Mazarin
  88. LXXXVI: Conferences
  89. LXXXVII: In Which We Begin to Think That Porthos Will Be at Last a Baron, and d’Artagnan a Captain
  90. LXXXVIII: Shows How with Threat and Pen More Is Effected Than by the Sword
  91. LXXXIX: In Which It Is Shown That It Is Sometimes More Difficult for Kings to Return to the Capitals of Their Kingdoms, Than to Make an Exit
  92. XC: Conclusion
  93. Endnotes
  94. Colophon
  95. Uncopyright

Landmarks

  1. Twenty Years After
  2. Endnotes