On February 24 , 1815 , the ship Pharaon came back from Smyrna , Trieste and Naples. Sadly , the original captain of the ship - Captain Leclere was dead due to brain fever. Danglars (who is responsible for all financial matters) claims that Dantes forced the ship to stop at the Isle of Elba, which cost them precious time. Dantes explained that captain Leclere told him to go there and to deliver a package to an exiled grand-marshal, Maréchal Bertrand. Afterwards , the ship owner , Morrel , offered Dantes to become the new captain of Pharaon. Later on , Dantes went to see his father . He was shocked by his father physical appearance as his father has been starving for the past few months. Dantes remember that he gave 200 francs to his father …show more content…
When Dantes arrived , he saw a guy named Fernand ( a guy who also likes Merceds) . Fernand felt depressed as by telling how Mercedes welcomed Dantes, he thinks that he’s not able to marry Mercedes. When Fernand was walking down the road , he saw Danglars and Caderousse drinking wine, he then got invited to drink with them . As they were drinking ,Danglars and Caderousse tried to trigger up the jealousy and angriness of Fernand towards Dantes. Dantes and Mercedes told them that they’re going to get married the next day as Dantes has to go to Paris. Danglars suspects Dantès is delivering a letter that was given to him by Napoleon to Bonapartist plotters. Supporters of Napoleon who are helping him plan to overthrow the French government. The allusion to the letter sparks an evil idea in Danglars’s mind. The next day , Danglars , Fernand and Caderousse discussed on how to “punish” Dantes. Danglars remembers the letter Napoleon gave him and he suggested that drafting a letter to inform the public prosecutor that dantes is hiding a letter from Napoleon to the Bonapartist Committee in Paris. Fernand then mailed the letter. During the betrothal feast, royal guards came in and arrested Dantès. Everyone in the feast has no wonder what was happening , including Dantes who did nothing wrong
While he was successful in his goal, the pain and suffering he caused to innocent people like Edouard, the son of Villefort, and Mercédès, the wife of Fernand, throws the question of whether Dantes was really successful into doubt, as he wanted to reward the innocents and not hurt them. While Dantes was getting his vengeance on the Villeforts, he unintentionally kills Edouard. Dantes immediately regrets what he did when Dumas states, “Monte Cristo paled at the horrible sight. He realized that he had gone beyond the limits of rightful vengeance” (485). Dantes immediately feels regret for killing the innocent boy when he sees him. Dumas emphasizes this regret and sorrow even more by stating how Dantes was pale from the sight of the consequences of his actions, something that only happens when you truly feel terrified of what you’ve done. He acknowledges for the first time in the story that he was wrong in his pursuit of revenge, so he himself admits that he went too far. He realized that while he did get his revenge on the Villeforts, this was too much as Edouard never did anything besides be related by blood to them. Dantes tries to revive Edouard, but he failed to bring him back, which is the first point in the story where he fails during his quest. He punished the bad and was highly successful with that, but the suffering that he caused upon innocent people made him realized his justice was not worth it or even good. Furthermore, the death of Edouard caused Dantes to become the wrongdoer this time, as he unjustly killed a person for no reason. His original idea was to bring justice to all these criminals, but he ended up only becoming one himself and bringing more undeserved tragedy to people. After everything had happened and Dantes achieved the vengeance he wanted, he reflects on his actions when Dumas says, “Having arrived at the summit of his
I 'll start with the simple one first. Danglars was one of the men that helped frame Dantes. He clawed is way up the social ladder because of his great wealth. He is very determined to keep it though. He abandons
Edmond Dantès, the main character of The Count of Monte Cristo, is an innocent and unsuspecting young man who is thrown in jail by those who were jealous of him. Once Edmond escaped, he changed his identity to the Count of Monte Cristo, and plotted a harsh revenge against his enemies. At the beginning, he said “Happiness is like one of those palaces in fairy tales whose gates guarded by dragons: we must fight in order to conquer it.” (Dantes 18) He thinks that his marriage with Mercédès is too good to be true, according to his statement. As it turned out, it was, and he was put in prison for fourteen years, and it was fifteen years before he saw her again. The only thing Edmond sought after he escaped from jail was revenge. So he took
In this quote, the author is showing how Dante’s finally learns about how he has gotten mistreated throughout the whole prison affair. I chose this quote because it shows the how gullible and trusting Dante’s was as a person and how it quickly changed into a fury that would not be extinguished.
Faria, a priest, completely changes Dantés' perspective on life when he helps Dantés figure out who put him in prison and why. Faria regretted what he had done to Dantés' innocent mind. Dumas writes, "Faria looked at him [Dantés] steadfastly and said, 'I regret having helped you clarify your past and having told you what I did.' 'Why?' 'Because I have instilled in your heart a feeling that wasn't there before: vengeance" (Dumas 58). When Faria dies, Dantés considers killing himself, but ends up vowing to get revenge instead. After a dramatic escape, Dantés sets out to destroy the lives of those who turned on him using his riches, important friends, and vast amount of knowledge. Dantés states, "He doomed these unknown men to all the tortures his fiery imagination could contrive, but even the cruelest ones seemed too mild and too short for them, for after the torment would come death, which would bring them, if not rest, at least the insensibility which resembles it" (Dumas 42). After life in prison, Dantés was no longer recognizable. He had been changed from the innocent, carefree, living life to the fullest boy of nineteen to a hardened and cynical adult man. Dantés' path of life had now become reversed the second he hits the water. He now lies to and uses everyone around him to further his own agenda of gaining revenge similar to the way
Edmond Dantes was a young leader whose purpose in life, who he cares about, and how others viewed him contributed with remaining humble to his father, his love for Mercedes, and most importantly himself. Yet his naive manner made him ignorant of his surroundings. The purpose of Dante's´ life contributed to his loved ones expressed by “ With my first pay I shall buy you little house with a garden where you can plant your clematis, your nasturtiums, and your honeysuckle” (Dumas , 10). This expressed Dantes’ immensely loving bond with his father, for his dream was to give everything he can to him. Edmond’s passion in life is to grow in happiness with his loved ones, for that is his only duty in life for him. His sole purpose is dedicated
The main theme that is presented within The Count of Monte Cristo is that revenge and manipulation is easily able to hurt someone, but also benefit another. In this case, Edmond Dantès takes the side of benefit and those brought underneath his vengeance had been ruined. After a plan carefully schemed by three of his false friends, Dantes was thrown into prison and placed under a situation of betrayal and resentment. This long wait in the chateau d’If had put a need for revenge into Dantès head which had transformed him into the Count of Monte Cristo. Although the Count was considered bitter and cold, his seek for revenge had only benefitted him into a more creatively malicious character. Furthermore, this manipulation that Dantès had been put
Often it is beneficial to break free of social norms to live a better and more fulfilling life. This is illustrated by characters in both Geraldine Brooks creates a character who does this in the novel Caleb’s Crossing, where a girl, Bethia, must escape the social norms of Puritan society to continue her education and live life as she wants. Although it was unusual in her world for a girl to seek an education, Bethia constantly learned from others and questioned society. Eventually, she marries a man who loves her for who she is. In the novel Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Sáenz, Aristotle meets a boy named Dante who teaches him to swim.
Edmond Dantes was a 19 year old man who became captain of a ship name the Pharaon. He was much loved by everyone. He is pretty gullible and becomes vengeful when the one guy he considered his friend betrayed him the other two who he was not to fond of ruined his life. He was a respectable young man who showed that numerous times like when he had to leave Morrel while he was talking to him; he said “I beg you excuse me, Monsieur Morrel (Dumas 5). He was to be betrothed to a girl named Mercedes who he’d loved very much but he loved his father most of all. He felt bad when he found out his father was broke from paying his debt causing him to fall to his knees and said “may God forgive me” (Dumas 9). Dantès is a pretty unique character who
Entry 1: Bibliographic Entry Sante, Luc, and Alexandre Dumas. The Count of Monte Cristo. New York: Barnes & Noble Classics, 2004. Print. A.
Priscila Saldivar Mr Brumit Lit Traditions II February 5, 2016 Fear of Love In Canto V Dante encounters the lustful souls who are trapped in the first circle of hell.
The notion that the sinners Virgil and Dante meet are historical figures tempts readers to interpret Dante’s symbolism in a historical sense. Paul G. Chevigny, for example, argues that Dante’s view on betrayal originates from his ethical concerns in a “political milieu” (Chevigny, 790). For Dante, the most severe crime was the most human, the one that most clearly exhibits the misuse of free will: the betrayal of trust. Dante believes that crimes of betrayal were the most serious not only because they required the most deliberate practice of free will, but also because they did the most damage to the ethical net of obligations in society. As previously mentioned, Dante’s political role in Florence established his ideal of a stable society built among the trust of political leaders and their followers.
Dantès visits each of the successful men and through elaborate plans dethrones them. Monsieur de Villefort explains to the Count of Monte Cristo, his alias for Edmond Dantès, about his father, “‘I conclude that my father, led astray by his passions, has committed one or more of those wrongs which escape human justice but not divine justice, and that God has struck him down because of this’” (Dumas 214). This ironically supports Dantès since the man he wants to have revenge on acknowledges that if one commits a crime then justice will be delivered back to one’s self one way or another. Therefore, in this case, Dantès is that divine justice who will take down the evildoers. He sees that justice is to occur either by man or God to unravel his vengeance. Each plan against the men took dedication and patience. He has been persistent throughout the whole novel to achieve his
Edmond Dantes was a simple and humble sailor who fell victim when his jealous partners frame him towards a political situation. Surrounded by tragedies during his imprisonment, such as his only companion, Abbe Faria, dying along with his aging father starving himself to death. Prison changes him however, entering an honest man and exiting as a resentful one. He becomes the Count of Monte Cristo when he goes to an island that Faria described to him and finds treasure. He becomes the Count of Monte Cristo because with all his millions, he can purchase anything he wants and can get revenge and punish his greedy colleagues.
By his noble speech the reader learns that political corruption can damn a man's soul. The punished sinners who suffered death for political reasons are of paramount importance to Dante. Accordingly, he shows in the suicide's circle of hell the extreme consequences of failure in political life. Pier committed suicide for the shame of losing his favored position as Frederick's counselor. This illustrates the ancient Roman concept of honorable suicide, which protests any unjust action that robs one of reputation.