Twenty Years After (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading)

Twenty Years After (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading)

Twenty Years After (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading)

Twenty Years After (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading)

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Overview

Twenty Years After (1845) resumes the adventures of Alexandre Dumas fabulous four begun in The Three Musketeers. “The inseparables”—Athos, Porthos, Aramis, and the irrepressible Gascon, dArtagnan—are once again called upon to save France from itself. This time, the paragons of honor, chivalry, and justice find themselves embroiled not only in court intrigue and royal affairs (including the Queens illicit liaison with her first minister, Cardinal Mazarin), but also popular revolution. Set during the minority of King Louis XIV, the English Revolution is about to reach its climax in the execution of Charles I and the revolt against the French crown known as the first Fronde is coming to a head. If the politics are more complex, the personalities are as well. Twenty years have wrought their changes on the impetuous young musketeers. They are older, grayer, and wiser, and each has more to lose. 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781411429246
Publisher: Barnes & Noble
Publication date: 09/01/2009
Series: Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 704
Sales rank: 492,940
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 3 Months to 18 Years

About the Author

About The Author

Alexandre Dumas (1802–1870) was a volcanic producer of plays, novels, journalism and other writings, and one of the dominant figures of the Romantic period. He showed the way for later historical novelists, traveling widely in search of material and background and employing a series of collaborators and researchers. Not simply an armchair adventurer, Dumas participated in the revolutions of 1830 and 1848, and later ran guns for Giuseppe Garibaldi.

Read an Excerpt

From the introduction by Bruce F. Murphy

Twenty Years After (1845) resumes the adventures of Alexandre Dumas fabulous four begun in The Three Musketeers. “The inseparables”--Athos, Porthos, Aramis, and the irrepressible Gascon, dArtagnan—are once again called upon to save France from itself. This time, the paragons of honor, chivalry, and justice find themselves embroiled not only in court intrigue and royal affairs (including the Queens illicit liaison with her first minister, Cardinal Mazarin), but also popular revolution. Set during the minority of king Louis XIV, the story is woven into some of the most unquiet years of the seventeenth century. The English Revolution is about to reach its climax in the execution of Charles I, and the revolt against the French crown known as the first Fronde is coming to a head. If the politics are more complex, the personalities are as well. Twenty years have wrought their changes on the impetuous young musketeers. They are older, grayer, and wiser, and each has more to lose. Often disparaged because of his vast popular success, Dumas was a subtle enough artist not to simply reprise his previous performance—Twenty Years After is not Three Musketeers II. Freely adapting history for his own purposes, Dumas pits the heroes not only against the forces of infamy, but sometimes even against each other. Told with Dumas flair and drama, the tale ranges from the scaffold at Whitehall to the battlefield of Lens to the barricades of Paris.

           

Alexandre Dumas (1802–1870) was a volcanic producer of plays, novels, journalism, and other writings, and one of the dominant figures of the Romantic period. His heroes—the three musketeers, the man in the iron mask, the count of Monte Cristo—became even more famous than Dumas himself. The son of a half-Haitian general in Napoleons army and a provincial innkeepers daughter, Dumas came to Paris in 1823 and worked as a clerk in the household of the future king Louis-Phillipe while immersing himself in the theatre. He had his first literary success with the historical play Henry III and his Court (1829), an innovative work that broke with the conventions of French neoclassicism. But among his more than three hundred books, it is his historical novels that have lasted longest and best. Jules Michelet called Dumas a “force of nature,” and indeed his fame during his lifetime rested not only on his works but his celebrated love affairs, court cases, and boom-and-bust fortunes. He showed the way for later historical novelists, traveling widely in search of material and background and employing a series of collaborators and researchers. Not simply an armchair adventurer, Dumas participated in the revolutions of 1830 and 1848, and later ran guns for Giuseppe Garibaldi. It was a career nothing short of heroic.

   

Dumas is a figure peculiarly suited to our own age. A writer through and through, the first character he created was himself, and this aspect of “self-invention” seems especially modern. After working for some years in a lawyer’s office, Dumas landed a job as a writer—literally. He became a copyist at the Palais-Royal, thanks to a connection with one of his fathers old friends. In his spare time Dumas attended the theatre and produced several apprentice plays that were never produced. In 1827, he saw a Shakespearean production in Paris featuring some of the most famous English actors of the day, including Edmund Kean and William Charles McCready. He quickly grasped the possibilities of using action, “low” characters, and comic counterpoint, so unlike the lapidary classicism of Racine and French dramatists. Dumas was so impressed he later wrote a play, Kean, about the great actor. It was not the only time when art imitated life and vice versa; during his palmy days after the publication of the musketeers saga and The Count of Monte Cristo, Dumas spent a fortune building the huge Chateau Monte Cristo (later sold when he fell into bankruptcy).

           

Although it can be read alone, as a sequel Twenty Years After is best understood in relation to its predecessor. The very title indicates this—a brooding sense of the passage of time hangs over it. The Three Musketeers is a youthful work, as restless and fresh and full of yearning as the hopes of the young provincial dArtagnan, who is still in his teens when the saga begins. For him, literally half a lifetime has passed between the rollicking adventures of The Three Musketeers and the opening of Twenty Years After. It is now 1648, and France is still engaged in the Thirty Years War, of which dArtagnan appears to have had his share. In the early pages of the sequel, we see him battle-hardened, middle-aged, and somewhat bitter that he has been two decades in the royal service and has not risen above the rank of lieutenant. He who once saved a queens reputation and her crown is now virtually invisible, a part of the furniture of the court. And far from being inseparable, it seems that dArtagnan has seen little of his companions during the intervening years.

           

Other things have changed too: instead of Cardinal Richelieu, their grand enemy in The Three Musketeers, they now have to do with the conniving, cowardly, and avaricious Cardinal Mazarin, the secret (or not-so-secret) lover of the queen, widow of Louis XIII. Worse, as the only one of the inseparables still in uniform, dArtagnan is obligated to carry out Mazarins orders. Neither the queen (Anne of Austria, a Spaniard and a Habsburg) nor Mazarin (the Italian-born Giulio Mazarini) is French. The king, Louis XIV, is only ten years old. While the Parisian masses revolt against the high taxes imposed by the foreign queen and her counsellor, the nobility is split between those loyal to the crown and others who see the Fronde as an opportunity to curb the power of the monarchy. Meanwhile, the Spanish hope to profit from unrest in France and are about to launch an attack. DArtagnan is at this moment summoned by Mazarin for some mysterious duty, and is ordered to round up his old brothers in arms. It takes him several journeys to do so, and when he does the results are sometimes unexpected. 

           

Porthos, the amiable giant of The Three Musketeers, has become enormously rich, though his displays of wealth are not always in good taste. He joins the adventure in search of an aristocratic title (a barony) to cap his good fortune. DArtagnan, ever poor, hopes for money and a promotion, but both Aramis and Athos demur. The former is still involved in his own complicated contradictions, only more so—now an abbé, he is irreverent as ever, and just as prone to vanity, intrigue, and affairs with noble ladies. Athos, who embodies Dumass ideal of the aristocrat by nature and by birth, seems more remote from ordinary mortals than ever.     

           

The difference in tone between the earlier novel and the sequel is all the more curious when one recalls that they were written in consecutive years. In 1845, Dumas was himself forty-three years old, and perhaps was closer to the emotional center of this novel than to its predecessor. Dumas lost his father at the age of four, which considerably diminished the family’s horizons. He worked in a lawyer’s office before moving to Paris, an ambitious provincial much like dArtagnan. Relationships between fathers and sons are prominent in this book—as is that between Mordaunt, the evil offspring of their earlier enemy, Milady de Winter, and the dead mother he has sworn to avenge. But as the book progresses, it becomes more and more evident that the central relationship is that between Athos and dArtagnan.

           

Already in The Three Musketeers, Dumas had dwelt for pages on Athoss character: his “rare sang-froid,” the “inalterable evenness of humor,” and the dark cloud of tragedy that hangs over him (the fact that Milady was formerly his wife is one of the sensational disclosures of the first book). Perfect in all the arts of the gentleman—not just riding and the practice of arms, but courtesy and classical learning--he had yet one failing: drink, which he used to blot out memories of past sorrows. But in Twenty Years After this flaw has been erased, and now sober, Athos is truly a “demigod,” particularly for dArtagnan, who had always idolized him. The reason for the change is that Athos has been the “guardian” of his own natural son, the Vicomte de Bragelonne, who still does not know that Athos is actually his father. (The Vicomte de Bragelonne is the general name for the three-volume work that completes the Musketeers saga.) Athos also calls dArtagnan “son,” and their relationship at times takes on quasi-religious overtones. It is not an accident that the final struggle is between Mordaunt, the embodiment of evil, and Athos, who is nearly brought down by his own Christian charity. Of the four companions, he is most troubled by the memory of the night that they condemned Milady to death (retold by the executioner of Béthune in chapter 34).

           

Like many Romantics, Dumas had nostalgia for the old aristocratic ideal and a belief in the natural nobility of simple, common people (like dArtagnans tough and loyal servant, Planchet). His contempt was reserved for the bourgeoisie, notwithstanding that they were also the foundation of his commercial success. Dumas has obvious sympathy with the Parisian masses, but Oliver Cromwell and his men are portrayed as boorish, fanatical, and cruel. As for Charles I of England, as Aramis says, “the king can do no wrong.” In line with the concept of divine right, the king is seen as the representative of God on earth, wrongly and unnaturally condemned by his subjects. There could be no more appropriate symbol of the upsetting of natural order than the picture of Athos beneath the scaffold after Charles execution, a drop of blood falling on his forehead like a brutal parody of benediction.   

           

It would be a mistake, however, to overemphasize the subtextual aspects of the novel. In the manner of the day, Twenty Years After was first serialized in Le Siècle and was directed at a popular audience hungry for romance and suspense. The serialized novel was then published as a book, and as was his practice, Dumas later adapted it for the stage. Producing for such a market was demanding; like Balzac, with whom he was often compared, Dumas sometimes wrote for more than twelve hours at a stretch, even turning out several novels at once. Nor was he always careful; he confused dates and times, and made use of coincidence more often than a modern author would dare. As in the theater, when props are needed they are found, be they horses or weapons or a sympathizer, or even a set of clothes (when dArtagnan and Porthos overpower two Swiss guards and steal their uniforms, one of them, of course, turns out to be enormous). But there are also passages of fine writing where he is at the height of his powers; the gallows scene and the deadly game of cat-and-mouse played aboard the felucca Lightning are among the most gripping scenes Dumas wrote.

           

In his time referred to as the French version of Sir Walter Scott, today Dumas is perhaps more readable for the English speaker than Scott himself, who spawned such a vast number of imitators in the genre of rousing, adventurous historical fiction. To the modern ear, Scott is often difficult to take seriously. This is still truer of another Scott imitator, James Fenimore Cooper (about whom Mark Twain wrote the essay, “Fenimore Coopers Literary Offenses”). It is not simply a matter of the choice of subject matter or period. Perhaps because of his own experiences, Dumas has, behind all the romantic pageantry, an unflattering and even cynical view of politics. The trial of Charles I is a show trial, a judicial murder; such grotesque parodies of justice are part of the “terrible logic of revolutions,” in which people initiate events that they are then powerless to control. Ulterior motives are the exception rather than the rule. No wonder that Athos aristocratic detachment is portrayed as not of this world. The novel, like the saga as a whole, remains unabashedly romantic, politically ambivalent, and full of verve.

Bruce F. Murphy is the author of The Encyclopedia of Murder and Mystery (2001) and the editor of the fourth edition of Benéts Readers Encyclopedia (1996).  His poetry, fiction, and essays have appeared in Critical Inquiry, Paris Review, Poetry, TriQuarterly, and other journals.          

 

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