Alexandre Dumas



Twenty Years After

Table of Contents




Catalogue of Titles




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Catalogue

Alexandre Dumas (1802-1870)

Twenty Years After

Table of Contents


Chapter 1:The Shade of Cardinal Richelieu
Chapter 2:A Nightly Patrol
Chapter 3:Dead Animosities
Chapter 4:Anne of Austria at the Age of Forty-Six
Chapter 5:The Gascon and the Italian
Chapter 6:D’Artagnan in his Fortieth Year
Chapter 7:Touches upon the Strange Effects a Half-Pistole May Have upon a Beadle and a Chorister
Chapter 8:How D’Artagnan, on Going to a Distance to Discover Aramis, Discovers His Old Friend on Horseback Behind His Own Planchet
Chapter 9:The Abbé D’Herblay
Chapter 10:Monsieur Porthos du Vallon de Bracieux de Pierrefonds
Chapter 11:How D’Artagnan, in Discovering the Retreat of Porthos, Perceives that Wealth Does Not Necessarily Produce Happiness
Chapter 12:In Which it is Shown that if Porthos was Discontented with His Condition, Musqueton was Completely Satisfied with His
Chapter 13:Two Angelic Faces
Chapter 14:The Castle of Bragelonne
Chapter 15:Athos as a Diplomatist
Chapter 16:The Duc de Beaufort
Chapter 17:Describes How the Duc de Beaufort Amused His Leisure Hours in the Donjon of Vincennes
Chapter 18:Grimaud Begins His Functions
Chapter 19:In Which the Contents of the Pâtes Made by the Successor of Father Marteau are Described
Chapter 20:One of Marie Michon’s Adventures
Chapter 21:The Abbé Scarron
Chapter 22:Saint Denis
Chapter 23:One of the Forty Methods of Escape of the Duc de Beaufort
Chapter 24:The Timely Arrival of D’Artagnan in Paris
Chapter 25:An Adventure on the High Road
Chapter 26:The Rencontre
Chapter 27:The Four Old Friends Prepare to Meet Again
Chapter 28:The Place Royale
Chapter 29:The Ferry Across the Oise
Chapter 30:Skirmishing
Chapter 31:The Monk
Chapter 32:The Absolution
Chapter 33:Grimaud Speaks
Chapter 34:On the Eve of Battle
Chapter 35:A Dinner in the Old Style
Chapter 36:A Letter from Charles the First
Chapter 37:Cromwell’s Letter
Chapter 38:Henrietta Maria and Mazarin
Chapter 39:How, Sometimes, the Unhappy Mistake Chance for Providence
Chapter 40:Uncle and Nephew
Chapter 41:Paternal Affection
Chapter 42:Another Queen in Want of Help
Chapter 43:In Which It Is Proved That First Impulses Are Oftentimes the Best
Chapter 44:Te Deum for the Victory of Lens
Chapter 45:The Beggar of St. Eustache
Chapter 46:The Tower of St. Jacques de la Boucherie
Chapter 47:The Riot
Chapter 48:The Riot Becomes a Revolution
Chapter 49:Misfortune Refreshes the Memory
Chapter 50:The Interview
Chapter 51:The Flight
Chapter 52:The Carriage of Monsieur le Coadjuteur
Chapter 53: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
Chapter 54:In Which We Hear Tidings of Aramis
Chapter 55:The Scotchman
Chapter 56:The Avenger
Chapter 57:Oliver Cromwell
Chapter 58:Jesus Seigneur
Chapter 59:In Which It Is Shown That Under the Most Trying Circumstances Noble Natures Never Lose Their Courage, Nor Good Stomachs Their Appetites
Chapter 60:Respect to Fallen Majesty
Chapter 61:D’Artagnan Hits on a Plan
Chapter 62:London
Chapter 63:The Trial
Chapter 64:Whitehall
Chapter 65:The Workmen
Chapter 66:Remember!
Chapter 67:The Man in the Mask
Chapter 68:Cromwell’s House
Chapter 69:Conversational
Chapter 70:The Skiff Lightning
Chapter 71:Port Wine
Chapter 72:End of the Port Wine Mystery
Chapter 73:Fatality
Chapter 74:How Musqueton, After Being Very Nearly Roasted, Had a Narrow Escape of Being Eaten
Chapter 75:The Return
Chapter 76:The Ambassadors
Chapter 77:The Three Lieutenants of the Generalissimo
Chapter 78:The Battle of Charenton
Chapter 79:The Road to Picardy
Chapter 80:The Gratitude of Anne of Austria
Chapter 81:Cardinal Mazarin as King
Chapter 82:Precautions
Chapter 83:Strength and Sagacity
Chapter 84:Strength and Sagacity—Continued
Chapter 85:The Oubliettes of Cardinal Mazarin
Chapter 86:Conferences
Chapter 87:In Which We Begin to Think That Porthos Will Be at Last a Baron, and D’Artagnan a Captain
Chapter 88:Shows How with Threat and Pen More Is Effected Than by the Sword
Chapter 89: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
Chapter 90:Conclusion




Catalogue of Titles


Chapter 1