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The Count of Monte Cristo
Short Summary
The novel begins with the handsome young sailor Edmond Dantes. He has
just returned from a journey aboard the Pharaon. The Pharaon s
shipowner, M. Morrel, rushes out to meet the ship. He finds that the
captain has died en route, and Dantes has assumed the post with
admirable skill. He thus plans to make Dantes officially the next
captain of the ship.
Dantes future is thus promising. His father s financial situation as
well as his own will be greatly ameliorated. In addition, Dantes has
plans to marry the beautiful Mercedes who has awaited his return from
sea with great anxiety and love.
Dantes will not get the chance to realize his bright future, however.
His success has earned him three conspiring enemies. They write a letter
falsely incriminating him in a Bonapartist plot (the royalists are
currently in power). These three enemies are Danglars, Fernand Mondego,
and Caderousse. Danglars will become captain of the Pharaon once Dantes
is removed, Fernand aspires to win Mercedes love, and Caderousse is a
jealous neighbor of Dantes.
Perhaps the conspiracy would not have been so successful had not the
denunciation fallen into the hands of the public prosecutor, Monsieur de
Villefort. This man has nothing personal against Dantes, however, he has
Dantes incarcerated as a most dangerous criminal. His policy against
Bonapartists must be extremely vigilant in order to counter the
reputation of his father. His father is a known Bonapartist, and
Villefort is paranoid that this fact shall hurt his career among the
ruling royalists. Thus, he throws Dantes, an innocent man, into the
Chateau D If.
Political regimes change, yet Dantes is forgotten. M. Morrel attempts to
have him freed, yet to no avail. In prison, Dantes loses hope and
decides to starve himself to death. Thankfully, the prisoner in the next
cell was building a tunnel to escape. Miscalculations bring the Abbe
Faria, to Dantes cell instead of freedom. The two become friends, and
the learned Abbe teaches Dantes all his vast knowledge of literature,
the sciences and languages. The Abbe also reveals to Dantes the location
of an immense treasure on the Isle of Monte Cristo. He hopes Dantes will
retrieve this treasure should he escape. When the Abbe dies, Dantes
replaces his body with the Abbe s. The Abbe s body bag is thrown into
the sea. Dantes is free at last, after fourteen years of imprisonment.
Dantes is saved from the sea by Italian smugglers.
Dantes only reason for living now is to have vengeance upon those who
threw his life away. He becomes a smuggler for a time, and finally has
the opportunity to retrieve the treasure spoken of by Abbe Faria. He
shall use this treasure to calculate the downfall of the four men who
imprisoned him. Dantes , now the Count of Monte Cristo, shall calculate
his revenge over the next10 years. He has already waited fourteen years,
thus he has learned the virtue of patience. These men deserve to suffer.
Their downfall shall be all the more destructive if his revenge is not
brash, but calculated. Over the next ten years, Monte Cristo conditions
himself, and learns of all the details of his enemies past. He also
amasses a circle of servants who are forever indebted to him. Using his
immense fortune he buys back freedom of men such as Peppino. Luigi
Vampa, the great Italian bandit is also indebted to the Count. These men
owe the Count their lives, and will prove indispensable to the Count s
plans for revenge.
Before exacting revenge, however, the Count rewards the one family that
remained true to him. He saves the Morrel firm from financial disaster
by providing a diamond and a new ship to the family anonymously.
The count is now ready to exact revenge. He understands his duty to act
as divine justice. When the Count is ready to enter Parisien society,
and to destroy his enemies, he does so through contact with Albert de
Morcerf. This is the son of Count de Morcerf, a new title given to the
very same Fernand Mondego who conspired against Dantes. By winning
Albert s trust he is introduced to all his former enemies, including
Danglars, Count de Morcerf, and Monsieur de Villefort. These men are at
the center of social and political life in Paris and are very rich.
Monte Cristo s arrival in Paris causes a great stir, for his fortune is
immense. None of his enemies recognize him however. In fact, they are
all eager to associate with this great man. Mercedes, now the Countess
de Morcerf, recognizes him, yet she does not reveal his identity to
anyone.
The Count of Monte Cristo also disguises himself as an Abbe and returns
to find Caderousse still a poor man. He gives Caderousse a diamond, yet
he knows this shall not bring Caderousse happiness. Caderousse s greed
is far too great. The diamond is part of Caderousse s slow punishment.
First, Caderousse kills a jeweler, his wife, and is then thrown into
prison. The Count, disguised as a Lord Wilmore, later helps Caderousse
escape from prison. Caderousse then attempts to rob the count, still not
knowing that it is Dantes. During this robbery attempt, Caderousse is
murdered by his accomplice, Benedetto. As Caderousse is dying, the Count
whispers his identity in Caderousse s ear. Caderousse then cries out to
God.
Fernand Mondego became a military hero and had married Mercedes who had
given up hope to ever see Dantes again. Mercedes was unaware of the
treachery of her husband. They have a fortune, and exist in Parisien
society as the Count and Countess de Morcerf. The Count destroys Morcerf
by revealing his military treachery to all of Parisien society. Monte
Cristo had bought Haydee as a slave. This girl was once the daughter of
Ali Pasha who was betrayed by Morcerf. She testifies that the Count sold
her into slavery. Her father had been the Count de Morcerf s benefactor.
Morcerf had killed her father, surrendered her father s Greek City to
the Turks, and sold his wife and daughter into slavery. When this news
is revealed to Paris, the Count de Morcerf is thus ruined. His wife and
son flee, and he shoots himself.
Monsieur de Villefort had married twice. He has one daughter by his
first wife and a son by his second wife. Valentine is his daughter. The
Count destroys de Villefort by introducing Andrea Calvacanti into
society. Benedetto, alias Calvacanti, is the son of Monsieur de
Villefort and Madame Danglars. Long ago, Villefort had attempted to bury
the newborn baby alive, but Bertuccio, now Monte Cristo s servant had
dug the baby up and saved it. Villefort s crime is revealed in a court
of law, since Calvacanti is on trial as an escaped convict. Villefort is
thus destroyed. His wife as treacherous as he had also poisoned his
entire family. Her motive was to gain a fortune for her son. The Count
however, had saved Valentine, since Maximilien Morrel, the son of M.
Morrel was in love with her. Villefort goes insane.
Danglars had become a rich banker. He has a wife and daughter. His wife
is of noble birth, yet when Danglars married her, her repute as a woman
was suspect. The Count destroys Danglars by opening credit with him for
six million francs. Right when Danglars needs this money, the Count also
takes a receipt for five million francs from him to cash. Danglars can
no longer uphold his firm. He follows Danglars to Italy, once Danglars
flees Paris. (Danglars has been alienated from his wife for years, and
his daughter runs off, as a result of a failed marriage contract to
Andrea Calvacanti. Monte Cristo had also arranged this failed
enterprise. Danglars thus had no reason to stay in Paris.) Danglars
tries to redeem his five million francs from Monte Cristo s firm in
Italy. Once he does this, Monte Cristo s bandits follow him, and they
destroy him financially by holding him captive and requiring him to pay
vast sums of money to survive on a little food. Danglars is left with
nothing and his hair turns white during his brief captivity with the
Monte Cristo s bandits. Monte Cristo does not fail to inform Danglars
his true identity.
Thus, the Count s revenge is now complete. He has succeeded in his quest
for slow revenge. His enemies have suffered for their sins. He has one
last meeting with Mercedes. Mercedes shall lead a life of prayer in a
convent, for her son has gone to rebuild his future in the army.
The Count of Monte Cristo had assumed the role of Providence by
destroying all that had been built by his enemies during his long years
of imprisonment. He must now leave. After leaving much of his belongings
to Maximilien Morrel and Valentine, to whom he wishes eternal love and
happiness, he leaves aboard a ship with Haydee his own new love
The book has been divided based on a 73 chapter edition; this may differ
from other editions.
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