VII In Which d’Artagnan Is Confounded, but Receives Aid from an Unexpected Quarter
VIII The Differing Effects of a Half-Pistole When Bestowed upon a Beadle and a Choirboy
IX In Which D’Artagnan, Seeking Aramis, Finds Him on Planchet’s Crupper
X The Abbé d’Herblay
XI Pas de Deux
XII Monsieur Porthos du Vallon de Bracieux de Pierrefonds
XIII In Which d’Artagnan Finds Porthos, and Learns That Money Can’t Buy Happiness
XIV In Which We Find That, If Porthos Was Unhappy with His Situation, Mousqueton Was Not
XV Angelic Youth
XVI The Château de Bragelonne
XVII The Diplomacy of Athos
XVIII Monsieur de Beaufort
XIX How the Duc de Beaufort Amused Himself in the Dungeon of Vincennes
XX Grimaud Assumes His Post
XXI What Was Hidden in the Pies of Père Marteau’s Successor
XXII An Adventure of Marie Michon
XXIII The Abbé Scarron
XXIV Saint-Denis
XXV One of the Duc de Beaufort’s Forty Methods of Escape
XXVI A Timely Arrival and a Hasty Departure
XXVII The King’s Highway
XXVIII Encounter
XXIX Good Councilor Broussel
XXX Four Old Friends Prepare for a Council
XXXI The Place Royale
XXXII The Oise Ferry
XXXIII Skirmish
XXXIV The Monk
XXXV The Absolution
XXXVI Grimaud Speaks
XXXVII The Eve of Battle
XXXVIII A Dinner as of Old
XXXIX The Letter from Charles I
XL The Letter from Cromwell
XLI Mazarin and Queen Henriette
XLII How Those in Need Sometimes Mistake Blind Luck for God’s Will
XLII The Uncle and the Nephew
XLIV Paternity
XLv Once More the Queen Asks for Aid
XLVI In Which It Is Shown That the First Impulse Is Always the Right One
Dramatis Personae
Notes on the Text of Twenty Years After
Acknowledgments
Also by Lawrence Ellsworth
Copyright
Twenty Years After Page 47