Twenty Years Later by Dumas, Alexandre. Part one

folding his arms, stood trembling with rage.

These proceedings made D’Artagnan and Porthos draw back.

D’Artagnan did not draw his sword; Porthos put his back into

the sheath.

“Never!” exclaimed Athos, raising his right hand to Heaven,

“never! I swear before God, who seeth us, and who, in the

darkness of this night heareth us, never shall my sword

cross yours, never my eye express a glance of anger, nor my

heart a throb of hatred, at you. We lived together, we

loved, we hated together; we shed, we mingled our blood

together, and too probably, I may still add, that there may

be yet a bond between us closer even than that of

friendship; perhaps there may be the bond of crime; for we

four, we once did condemn, judge and slay a human being whom

we had not any right to cut off from this world, although

apparently fitter for hell than for this life. D’Artagnan, I

have always loved you as my son; Porthos, we slept six years

side by side; Aramis is your brother as well as mine, and

Aramis has once loved you, as I love you now and as I have

ever loved you. What can Cardinal Mazarin be to us, to four

men who compelled such a man as Richelieu to act as we

pleased? What is such or such a prince to us, who fixed the

diadem upon a great queen’s head? D’Artagnan, I ask your

pardon for having yesterday crossed swords with you; Aramis

does the same to Porthos; now hate me if you can; but for my

own part, I shall ever, even if you do hate me, retain

esteem and friendship for you. I repeat my words, Aramis,

and then, if you desire it, and if they desire it, let us

separate forever from our old friends.”

There was a solemn, though momentary silence, which was

broken by Aramis.

“I swear,” he said, with a calm brow and kindly glance, but

in a voice still trembling with recent emotion, “I swear

that I no longer bear animosity to those who were once my

friends. I regret that I ever crossed swords with you,

Porthos; I swear not only that it shall never again be

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Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

pointed at your breast, but that in the bottom of my heart

there will never in future be the slightest hostile

sentiment; now, Athos, come.”

Athos was about to retire.

“Oh! no! no! do not go away!” exclaimed D’Artagnan, impelled

by one of those irresistible impulses which showed the

nobility of his nature, the native brightness of his

character; “I swear that I would give the last drop of my

blood and the last fragment of my limbs to preserve the

friendship of such a friend as you, Athos — of such a man

as you, Aramis.” And he threw himself into the arms of

Athos.

“My son!” exclaimed Athos, pressing him in his arms.

“And as for me,” said Porthos, “I swear nothing, but I’m

choked. Forsooth! If I were obliged to fight against you, I

think I should allow myself to be pierced through and

through, for I never loved any one but you in the wide

world;” and honest Porthos burst into tears as he embraced

Athos.

“My friends,” said Athos, “this is what I expected from such

hearts as yours. Yes, I have said it and I now repeat it:

our destinies are irrevocably united, although we now pursue

divergent roads. I respect your convictions, and whilst we

fight for opposite sides, let us remain friends. Ministers,

princes, kings, will pass away like mountain torrents; civil

war, like a forest flame; but we — we shall remain; I have

a presentiment that we shall.”

“Yes,” replied D’Artagnan, “let us still be musketeers, and

let us retain as our battle-standard that famous napkin of

the bastion St. Gervais, on which the great cardinal had

three fleurs-de-lis embroidered.”

“Be it so,” cried Aramis. “Cardinalists or Frondeurs, what

matters it? Let us meet again as capital seconds in a duel,

devoted friends in business, merry companions in our ancient

pleasures.”

“And whenever,” added Athos, “we meet in battle, at this

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