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- Александр Дюма
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- Три мушкетера
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- Стр. 176/849
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The
second
commissary
was
as
much
bewildered
as
the
first
had
been
by
the
simple
and
firm
declaration
of
the
Musketeer
,
upon
whom
he
was
anxious
to
take
the
revenge
which
men
of
the
robe
like
at
all
times
to
gain
over
men
of
the
sword
;
but
the
name
of
M.
de
Treville
,
and
that
of
M.
de
la
Tremouille
,
commanded
a
little
reflection
.
Athos
was
then
sent
to
the
cardinal
;
but
unfortunately
the
cardinal
was
at
the
Louvre
with
the
king
.
It
was
precisely
at
this
moment
that
M.
de
Treville
,
on
leaving
the
residence
of
the
LIEUTENANT-CRIMINEL
and
the
governor
of
the
Fort
l'Eveque
without
being
able
to
find
Athos
,
arrived
at
the
palace
.
As
captain
of
the
Musketeers
,
M.
de
Treville
had
the
right
of
entry
at
all
times
.
It
is
well
known
how
violent
the
king
's
prejudices
were
against
the
queen
,
and
how
carefully
these
prejudices
were
kept
up
by
the
cardinal
,
who
in
affairs
of
intrigue
mistrusted
women
infinitely
more
than
men
.
One
of
the
grand
causes
of
this
prejudice
was
the
friendship
of
Anne
of
Austria
for
Mme.
de
Chevreuse
.
These
two
women
gave
him
more
uneasiness
than
the
war
with
Spain
,
the
quarrel
with
England
,
or
the
embarrassment
of
the
finances
.
In
his
eyes
and
to
his
conviction
,
Mme.
de
Chevreuse
not
only
served
the
queen
in
her
political
intrigues
,
but
,
what
tormented
him
still
more
,
in
her
amorous
intrigues
.
At
the
first
word
the
cardinal
spoke
of
Mme.
de
Chevreuse
--
who
,
though
exiled
to
Tours
and
believed
to
be
in
that
city
,
had
come
to
Paris
,
remained
there
five
days
,
and
outwitted
the
police
--
the
king
flew
into
a
furious
passion
.
Capricious
and
unfaithful
,
the
king
wished
to
be
called
Louis
the
Just
and
Louis
the
Chaste
.
Posterity
will
find
a
difficulty
in
understanding
this
character
,
which
history
explains
only
by
facts
and
never
by
reason
.
But
when
the
cardinal
added
that
not
only
Mme.
de
Chevreuse
had
been
in
Paris
,
but
still
further
,
that
the
queen
had
renewed
with
her
one
of
those
mysterious
correspondences
which
at
that
time
was
named
a
CABAL
;
when
he
affirmed
that
he
,
the
cardinal
,
was
about
to
unravel
the
most
closely
twisted
thread
of
this
intrigue
;
that
at
the
moment
of
arresting
in
the
very
act
,
with
all
the
proofs
about
her
,
the
queen
's
emissary
to
the
exiled
duchess
,
a
Musketeer
had
dared
to
interrupt
the
course
of
justice
violently
,
by
falling
sword
in
hand
upon
the
honest
men
of
the
law
,
charged
with
investigating
impartially
the
whole
affair
in
order
to
place
it
before
the
eyes
of
the
king
--
Louis
XIII
could
not
contain
himself
,
and
he
made
a
step
toward
the
queen
's
apartment
with
that
pale
and
mute
indignation
which
,
when
in
broke
out
,
led
this
prince
to
the
commission
of
the
most
pitiless
cruelty
.
And
yet
,
in
all
this
,
the
cardinal
had
not
yet
said
a
word
about
the
Duke
of
Buckingham
.
At
this
instant
M.
de
Treville
entered
,
cool
,
polite
,
and
in
irreproachable
costume
.
Informed
of
what
had
passed
by
the
presence
of
the
cardinal
and
the
alteration
in
the
king
's
countenance
,
M.
de
Treville
felt
himself
something
like
Samson
before
the
Philistines
.