The Count of Monte Cristo cover
Adventure Stories

The Count of Monte Cristo

Dumas, Alexandre · 1998 · 11 min

Morrel’s Arrival and Bridal Party Fetch

M. Morrel’s arrival at La Réserve was greeted by enthusiastic applause from the crew of the Pharaon, who interpreted the shipowner’s presence as a sign that Edmond would soon be promoted to captain, while Danglars confirmed the rumors of Morrel’s attendance before being sent, together with Caderousse, to fetch the bridegroom. The two men soon met the advancing bridal party—Mercédès and Dantès radiant with happiness, the elder Dantès resplendent in a suit of glistening watered silk, and Fernand trailing behind with his sinister smile barely concealing his jealous torment—after which the company ascended to the festal chamber to feast on Arlesian sausages, lobsters, prawns, and other “fruits of the sea.” The growing hilarity was suddenly stilled by the measured tread of soldiers on the stairs and three knocks on the panel, whereupon a magistrate wearing his official scarf entered and arrested Edmond Dantès in the name of the law, reducing the old father to desperate pleas that moved even the officer to offer some small comfort about a likely release.

Bridal Party Arrival and Character Details

Bridal Party Arrival and Character Details

Feast Seating and Seafood Service

The feast had been prepared on the second floor of La Réserve, where guests gathered on the wooden balcony well before the noon hour, attired in their finest attire, while rumors circulated that the owners of the Pharaon might attend the nuptials—a hope confirmed when M. Morrel appeared and was greeted with enthusiastic applause from the crew, who hailed his presence as a sign that Dantès would soon command the ship. As the bridal procession approached, with old Dantès dressed in a glistening watered-silk suit and Danglars and Caderousse joining the party, the seating was carefully arranged: Mercédès placed her father at her right and Fernand at her left, while Dantès seated M. Morrel at his right and Danglars at his left. The meal opened with a procession of seafood delicacies, including dusky Arlesian sausages, lobsters in their red shells, large prawns, prickly echinus, and the prized clovis, prompting the elder Dantès to remark on the curious silence of the assembly; yet even as Dantès explained that in an hour and a half Mercédès would officially be his wife and revealed plans for a second feast after his return from Paris, the gathering’s mood was shattered by the measured tread of soldiers on the stairs and three authoritative blows on the door, leading a magistrate to enter and arrest Edmond Dantès in the name of the law, leaving the stunned company in speechless dread.

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