Twenty Years Later by Dumas, Alexandre. Part two

matters differently, D’Artagnan, and think otherwise. I will

not attempt to argue with you, but I blame you.”

“Heyday!” cried D’Artagnan, “what matters it to me, after

all, if Cromwell, who’s an Englishman, revolts against his

king, who is a Scotchman? I am myself a Frenchman. I have

nothing to do with these things — why hold me responsible?”

“Yes,” said Porthos.

“Because all gentlemen are brothers, because you are a

gentleman, because the kings of all countries are the first

among gentlemen, because the blind populace, ungrateful and

brutal, always takes pleasure in pulling down what is above

them. And you, you, D’Artagnan, a man sprung from the

ancient nobility of France, bearing an honorable name,

carrying a good sword, have helped to give up a king to

beersellers, shopkeepers, and wagoners. Ah! D’Artagnan!

perhaps you have done your duty as a soldier, but as a

gentleman, I say that you are very culpable.”

D’Artagnan was chewing the stalk of a flower, unable to

reply and thoroughly uncomfortable; for when turned from the

eyes of Athos he encountered those of Aramis.

“And you, Porthos,” continued the count, as if in

consideration for D’Artagnan’s embarrassment, “you, the best

heart, the best friend, the best soldier that I know — you,

with a soul that makes you worthy of a birth on the steps of

a throne, and who, sooner or later, must receive your reward

from an intelligent king — you, my dear Porthos, you, a

gentleman in manners, in tastes and in courage, you are as

culpable as D’Artagnan.”

Porthos blushed, but with pleasure rather than with

confusion; and yet, bowing his head, as if humiliated, he

said:

“Yes, yes, my dear count, I feel that you are right.”

Athos arose.

“Come,” he said, stretching out his hand to D’Artagnan,

“come, don’t be sullen, my dear son, for I have said all

this to you, if not in the tone, at least with the feelings

of a father. It would have been easier to me merely to have

thanked you for preserving my life and not to have uttered a

word of all this.”

“Doubtless, doubtless, Athos. But here it is: you have

sentiments, the devil knows what, such as every one can’t

entertain. Who could suppose that a sensible man could leave

his house, France, his ward — a charming youth, for we saw

him in the camp — to fly to the aid of a rotten, worm-eaten

royalty, which is going to crumble one of these days like an

old hovel. The sentiments you air are certainly fine, so

fine that they are superhuman.”

“However that may be, D’Artagnan,” replied Athos, without

falling into the snare which his Gascon friend had prepared

for him by an appeal to his parental love, “however that may

be, you know in the bottom of your heart that it is true;

but I am wrong to dispute with my master. D’Artagnan, I am

your prisoner — treat me as such.”

Page 408

Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

“Ah! pardieu!” said D’Artagnan, “you know you will not be my

prisoner very long.”

“No,” said Aramis, “they will doubtless treat us like the

prisoners of the Philipghauts.”

“And how were they treated?” asked D’Artagnan.

“Why,” said Aramis, “one-half were hanged and the other half

were shot.”

“Well, I,” said D’Artagnan “I answer that while there

remains a drop of blood in my veins you will be neither

hanged nor shot. Sang Diou! let them come on! Besides — do

you see that door, Athos?”

“Yes; what then?”

“Well, you can go out by that door whenever you please; for

from this moment you are free as the air.”

“I recognize you there, my brave D’Artagnan,” replied Athos;

“but you are no longer our masters. That door is guarded,

D’Artagnan; you know that.”

“Very well, you will force it,” said Porthos. “There are

only a dozen men at the most.”

“That would be nothing for us four; it is too much for us

two. No, divided as we now are, we must perish. See the

fatal example: on the Vendomois road, D’Artagnan, you so

brave, and you, Porthos, so valiant and so strong — you

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