Dantes offers Caderousse money, but Caderousse is as much obliged as if he took advantage of it. Danglars asks Caderousse to put the money back in his box, but Caderousse refuses, saying he is not in any need and his living is suited to his means. When Caderousse returns to Marseilles, he meets Danglars and meets his friend Caderousse. Dantes congratulates Caderousse on his return, but Edmond does not need anything.Dantes and Caderousse are friends who owe gratitude to those who owe them money. Caderousse is a neighbor who has done Dantes a service, and Dantes lent Edmond money and Edmond returned it. Dantes encourages Edmond to buy some provisions and a servant, and Caderousse appears at the door with a piece of cloth he is about to make into a coat-lining. Edmond has lived for three months on sixty francs, and his father has wounded him to the heart.Edmond returns to his father, Dantes, with a promising future and a little money. Dantes gives Edmond two hundred francs when he left three months ago, but he owes Caderousse a hundred and forty francs. Edmond asks for a glass of wine, but the old man does not have it. The old man agrees with Edmond that this is more than a poor sailor could have hoped for.Dantes offers Edmond a small house with a garden, but the old man refuses. Dantes’ father is pale and trembling when he sees his son, Edmond. Summary of The Count of Monte Cristo:ĭantes’ father, the Pharaon, arrives in a small house on the left of the Allees de Meillan. It follows the revised French edition of 1846, with the correct spelling of “Cristo” and the extra chapter The House on the Allées de Meilhan. The book is considered a literary classic today and has become a fixture of Western civilization’s literature.The Count of Monte Cristo was originally published in the Journal des Débats in eighteen parts and was serialized from 28 August 1844 to 15 January 1846.The most common English translation of Monte Christo is an anonymous one published in 1846 by Chapman and Hall. Abbé Faria educates Dantès and tells him of a cache of treasure he found. It follows Edmond Dantès, a French 19-year-old first mate of the Pharaon, who is falsely accused of treason and imprisoned without trial. Alexandre Dumas’ The Count of Monte Cristo is a popular adventure novel expanded from plot outlines.The Count of Monte Cristo is a French historical novel written by Alexandre Dumas and Auguste Maquet in 1844-1846.
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