Skip to main content

Chapter 86- The Trial.

Chapter 86

The Trial.

 

At eight o'clock in the morning Albert had arrived at

Beauchamp's door. The valet de chambre had received orders

to usher him in at once. Beauchamp was in his bath. "Here I

am," said Albert.

 

"Well, my poor friend," replied Beauchamp, "I expected you."

 

"I need not say I think you are too faithful and too kind to

have spoken of that painful circumstance. Your having sent

for me is another proof of your affection. So, without

losing time, tell me, have you the slightest idea whence

this terrible blow proceeds?"

 

"I think I have some clew."

 

"But first tell me all the particulars of this shameful

plot." Beauchamp proceeded to relate to the young man, who

was overwhelmed with shame and grief, the following facts.

Two days previously, the article had appeared in another

paper besides the Impartial, and, what was more serious, one

that was well known as a government paper. Beauchamp was

breakfasting when he read the paragraph. He sent immediately

for a cabriolet, and hastened to the publisher's office.

Although professing diametrically opposite principles from

those of the editor of the other paper, Beauchamp -- as it

sometimes, we may say often, happens -- was his intimate

friend. The editor was reading, with apparent delight, a

leading article in the same paper on beet-sugar, probably a

composition of his own.

 

"Ah, pardieu," said Beauchamp, "with the paper in your hand,

my friend, I need not tell you the cause of my visit."

 

"Are you interested in the sugar question?" asked the editor

of the ministerial paper.

 

"No," replied Beauchamp, "I have not considered the

question; a totally different subject interests me."

 

"What is it?"

 

"The article relative to Morcerf."

 

"Indeed? Is it not a curious affair?"

 

"So curious, that I think you are running a great risk of a

prosecution for defamation of character."

 

"Not at all; we have received with the information all the

requisite proofs, and we are quite sure M. de Morcerf will

not raise his voice against us; besides, it is rendering a

service to one's country to denounce these wretched

criminals who are unworthy of the honor bestowed on them."

Beauchamp was thunderstruck. "Who, then, has so correctly

informed you?" asked he; "for my paper, which gave the first

information on the subject, has been obliged to stop for

want of proof; and yet we are more interested than you in

exposing M. de Morcerf, as he is a peer of France, and we

are of the opposition."

 

"Oh, that is very simple; we have not sought to scandalize.

This news was brought to us. A man arrived yesterday from

Yanina, bringing a formidable array of documents; and when

we hesitated to publish the accusatory article, he told us

it should be inserted in some other paper."

 

Beauchamp understood that nothing remained but to submit,

and left the office to despatch a courier to Morcerf. But he

had been unable to send to Albert the following particulars,

as the events had transpired after the messenger's

departure; namely, that the same day a great agitation was

manifest in the House of Peers among the usually calm

members of that dignified assembly. Every one had arrived

almost before the usual hour, and was conversing on the

melancholy event which was to attract the attention of the

public towards one of their most illustrious colleagues.

Some were perusing the article, others making comments and

recalling circumstances which substantiated the charges

still more. The Count of Morcerf was no favorite with his

colleagues. Like all upstarts, he had had recourse to a

great deal of haughtiness to maintain his position. The true

nobility laughed at him, the talented repelled him, and the

honorable instinctively despised him. He was, in fact, in

the unhappy position of the victim marked for sacrifice; the

finger of God once pointed at him, every one was prepared to

raise the hue and cry.

 

The Count of Morcerf alone was ignorant of the news. He did

not take in the paper containing the defamatory article, and

had passed the morning in writing letters and in trying a

horse. He arrived at his usual hour, with a proud look and

insolent demeanor; he alighted, passed through the

corridors, and entered the house without observing the

hesitation of the door-keepers or the coolness of his

colleagues. Business had already been going on for half an

hour when he entered. Every one held the accusing paper,

but, as usual, no one liked to take upon himself the

responsibility of the attack. At length an honorable peer,

Morcerf's acknowledged enemy, ascended the tribune with that

solemnity which announced that the expected moment had

arrived. There was an impressive silence; Morcerf alone knew

not why such profound attention was given to an orator who

was not always listened to with so much complacency. The

count did not notice the introduction, in which the speaker

announced that his communication would be of that vital

importance that it demanded the undivided attention of the

House; but at the mention of Yanina and Colonel Fernand, he

turned so frightfully pale that every member shuddered and

fixed his eyes upon him. Moral wounds have this peculiarity,

-- they may be hidden, but they never close; always painful,

always ready to bleed when touched, they remain fresh and

open in the heart.

 

The article having been read during the painful hush that

followed, a universal shudder pervaded the assembly. and

immediately the closest attention was given to the orator as

he resumed his remarks. He stated his scruples and the

difficulties of the case; it was the honor of M. de Morcerf,

and that of the whole House, he proposed to defend, by

provoking a debate on personal questions, which are always

such painful themes of discussion. He concluded by calling

for an investigation, which might dispose of the calumnious

report before it had time to spread, and restore M. de

Morcerf to the position he had long held in public opinion.

Morcerf was so completely overwhelmed by this great and

unexpected calamity that he could scarcely stammer a few

words as he looked around on the assembly. This timidity,

which might proceed from the astonishment of innocence as

well as the shame of guilt, conciliated some in his favor;

for men who are truly generous are always ready to

compassionate when the misfortune of their enemy surpasses

the limits of their hatred.

 

The president put it to the vote, and it was decided that

the investigation should take place. The count was asked

what time he required to prepare his defence. Morcerf's

courage had revived when he found himself alive after this

horrible blow. "My lords," answered he, "it is not by time I

could repel the attack made on me by enemies unknown to me,

and, doubtless, hidden in obscurity; it is immediately, and

by a thunderbolt, that I must repel the flash of lightning

which, for a moment, startled me. Oh, that I could, instead

of taking up this defence, shed my last drop of blood to

prove to my noble colleagues that I am their equal in

worth." These words made a favorable impression on behalf of

the accused. "I demand, then, that the examination shall

take place as soon as possible, and I will furnish the house

with all necessary information."

 

"What day do you fix?" asked the president.

 

"To-day I am at your service," replied the count. The

president rang the bell. "Does the House approve that the

examination should take place to-day?"

 

"Yes," was the unanimous answer.

 

A committee of twelve members was chosen to examine the

proofs brought forward by Morcerf. The investigation would

begin at eight o'clock that evening in the committee-room,

and if postponement were necessary, the proceedings would be

resumed each evening at the same hour. Morcerf asked leave

to retire; he had to collect the documents he had long been

preparing against this storm, which his sagacity had

foreseen.

 

Albert listened, trembling now with hope, then with anger,

and then again with shame, for from Beauchamp's confidence

he knew his father was guilty, and he asked himself how,

since he was guilty, he could prove his innocence. Beauchamp

hesitated to continue his narrative. "What next?" asked

Albert.

 

"What next? My friend, you impose a painful task on me. Must

you know all?"

 

"Absolutely; and rather from your lips than another's."

 

"Muster up all your courage, then, for never have you

required it more." Albert passed his hand over his forehead,

as if to try his strength, as a man who is preparing to

defend his life proves his shield and bends his sword. He

thought himself strong enough, for he mistook fever for

energy. "Go on," said he.

 

"The evening arrived; all Paris was in expectation. Many

said your father had only to show himself to crush the

charge against him; many others said he would not appear;

while some asserted that they had seen him start for

Brussels; and others went to the police-office to inquire if

he had taken out a passport. I used all my influence with

one of the committee, a young peer of my acquaintance, to

get admission to one of the galleries. He called for me at

seven o'clock, and, before any one had arrived, asked one of

the door-keepers to place me in a box. I was concealed by a

column, and might witness the whole of the terrible scene

which was about to take place. At eight o'clock all were in

their places, and M. de Morcerf entered at the last stroke.

He held some papers in his hand; his countenance was calm,

and his step firm, and he was dressed with great care in his

military uniform, which was buttoned completely up to the

chin. His presence produced a good effect. The committee was

made up of Liberals, several of whom came forward to shake

hands with him."

 

Albert felt his heart bursting at these particulars, but

gratitude mingled with his sorrow: he would gladly have

embraced those who had given his father this proof of esteem

at a moment when his honor was so powerfully attacked. "At

this moment one of the door-keepers brought in a letter for

the president. `You are at liberty to speak, M. de Morcerf,'

said the president, as he unsealed the letter; and the count

began his defence, I assure you, Albert, in a most eloquent

and skilful manner. He produced documents proving that the

Vizier of Yanina had up to the last moment honored him with

his entire confidence, since he had interested him with a

negotiation of life and death with the emperor. He produced

the ring, his mark of authority, with which Ali Pasha

generally sealed his letters, and which the latter had given

him, that he might, on his return at any hour of the day or

night, gain access to the presence, even in the harem.

Unfortunately, the negotiation failed, and when he returned

to defend his benefactor, he was dead. `But,' said the

count, `so great was Ali Pasha's confidence, that on his

death-bed he resigned his favorite mistress and her daughter

to my care.'" Albert started on hearing these words; the

history of Haidee recurred to him, and he remembered what

she had said of that message and the ring, and the manner in

which she had been sold and made a slave. "And what effect

did this discourse produce?" anxiously inquired Albert. "I

acknowledge it affected me, and, indeed, all the committee

also," said Beauchamp.

 

"Meanwhile, the president carelessly opened the letter which

had been brought to him; but the first lines aroused his

attention; he read them again and again, and fixing his eyes

on M. de Morcerf, `Count,' said he, `you have said that the

Vizier of Yanina confided his wife and daughter to your

care?' -- `Yes, sir,' replied Morcerf; `but in that, like

all the rest, misfortune pursued me. On my return, Vasiliki

and her daughter Haidee had disappeared.' -- `Did you know

them?' -- `My intimacy with the pasha and his unlimited

confidence had gained me an introduction to them, and I had

seen them above twenty times.'

 

"`Have you any idea what became of them?' -- `Yes, sir; I

heard they had fallen victims to their sorrow, and, perhaps,

to their poverty. I was not rich; my life was in constant

danger; I could not seek them, to my great regret.' The

president frowned imperceptibly. `Gentlemen,' said he, `you

have heard the Comte de Morcerf's defence. Can you, sir,

produce any witnesses to the truth of what you have

asserted?' -- `Alas, no, monsieur,' replied the count; `all

those who surrounded the vizier, or who knew me at his

court, are either dead or gone away, I know not where. I

believe that I alone, of all my countrymen, survived that

dreadful war. I have only the letters of Ali Tepelini, which

I have placed before you; the ring, a token of his

good-will, which is here; and, lastly, the most convincing

proof I can offer, after an anonymous attack, and that is

the absence of any witness against my veracity and the

purity of my military life.' A murmur of approbation ran

through the assembly; and at this moment, Albert, had

nothing more transpired, your father's cause had been

gained. It only remained to put it to the vote, when the

president resumed: `Gentlemen and you, monsieur, -- you will

not be displeased, I presume, to listen to one who calls

himself a very important witness, and who has just presented

himself. He is, doubtless, come to prove the perfect

innocence of our colleague. Here is a letter I have just

received on the subject; shall it be read, or shall it be

passed over? and shall we take no notice of this incident?'

M. de Morcerf turned pale, and clinched his hands on the

papers he held. The committee decided to hear the letter;

the count was thoughtful and silent. The president read: --

 

"`Mr. President, -- I can furnish the committee of inquiry

into the conduct of the Lieutenant-General the Count of

Morcerf in Epirus and in Macedonia with important

particulars.'

 

"The president paused, and the count turned pale. The

president looked at his auditors. `Proceed,' was heard on

all sides. The president resumed: --

 

"`I was on the spot at the death of Ali Pasha. I was present

during his last moments. I know what is become of Vasiliki

and Haidee. I am at the command of the committee, and even

claim the honor of being heard. I shall be in the lobby when

this note is delivered to you.'

 

"`And who is this witness, or rather this enemy?' asked the

count, in a tone in which there was a visible alteration.

`We shall know, sir,' replied the president. `Is the

committee willing to hear this witness?' -- `Yes, yes,' they

all said at once. The door-keeper was called. `Is there any

one in the lobby?' said the president.

 

"`Yes, sir.' -- `Who is it?' -- `A woman, accompanied by a

servant.' Every one looked at his neighbor. `Bring her in,'

said the president. Five minutes after the door-keeper again

appeared; all eyes were fixed on the door, and I," said

Beauchamp, "shared the general expectation and anxiety.

Behind the door-keeper walked a woman enveloped in a large

veil, which completely concealed her. It was evident, from

her figure and the perfumes she had about her, that she was

young and fastidious in her tastes, but that was all. The

president requested her to throw aside her veil, and it was

then seen that she was dressed in the Grecian costume, and

was remarkably beautiful."

 

"Ah," said Albert, "it was she."

 

"Who?"

 

"Haidee."

 

"Who told you that?"

 

"Alas, I guess it. But go on, Beauchamp. You see I am calm

and strong. And yet we must be drawing near the disclosure."

 

"M. de Morcerf," continued Beauchamp, "looked at this woman

with surprise and terror. Her lips were about to pass his

sentence of life or death. To the committee the adventure

was so extraordinary and curious, that the interest they had

felt for the count's safety became now quite a secondary

matter. The president himself advanced to place a seat for

the young lady; but she declined availing herself of it. As

for the count, he had fallen on his chair; it was evident

that his legs refused to support him.

 

"`Madame,' said the president, `you have engaged to furnish

the committee with some important particulars respecting the

affair at Yanina, and you have stated that you were an

eyewitness of the event.' -- `I was, indeed,' said the

stranger, with a tone of sweet melancholy, and with the

sonorous voice peculiar to the East.

 

"`But allow me to say that you must have been very young

then.' -- `I was four years old; but as those events deeply

concerned me, not a single detail has escaped my memory.' --

`In what manner could these events concern you? and who are

you, that they should have made so deep an impression on

you?' -- `On them depended my father's life,' replied she.

`I am Haidee, the daughter of Ali Tepelini, pasha of Yanina,

and of Vasiliki, his beloved wife.'

 

"The blush of mingled pride and modesty which suddenly

suffused the cheeks of the young woman, the brilliancy of

her eye, and her highly important communication, produced an

indescribable effect on the assembly. As for the count, he

could not have been more overwhelmed if a thunderbolt had

fallen at his feet and opened an immense gulf before him.

`Madame,' replied the president, bowing with profound

respect, `allow me to ask one question; it shall be the

last: Can you prove the authenticity of what you have now

stated?' -- `I can, sir,' said Haidee, drawing from under

her veil a satin satchel highly perfumed; `for here is the

register of my birth, signed by my father and his principal

officers, and that of my baptism, my father having consented

to my being brought up in my mother's faith, -- this latter

has been sealed by the grand primate of Macedonia and

Epirus; and lastly (and perhaps the most important), the

record of the sale of my person and that of my mother to the

Armenian merchant El-Kobbir, by the French officer, who, in

his infamous bargain with the Porte, had reserved as his

part of the booty the wife and daughter of his benefactor,

whom he sold for the sum of four hundred thousand francs.' A

greenish pallor spread over the count's cheeks, and his eyes

became bloodshot at these terrible imputations, which were

listened to by the assembly with ominous silence.

 

"Haidee, still calm, but with a calmness more dreadful than

the anger of another would have been, handed to the

president the record of her sale, written in Arabic. It had

been supposed some of the papers might be in the Arabian,

Romaic, or Turkish language, and the interpreter of the

House was in attendance. One of the noble peers, who was

familiar with the Arabic language, having studied it during

the famous Egyptian campaign, followed with his eye as the

translator read aloud: --

 

"`I, El-Kobbir, a slave-merchant, and purveyor of the harem

of his highness, acknowledge having received for

transmission to the sublime emperor, from the French lord,

the Count of Monte Cristo, an emerald valued at eight

hundred thousand francs; as the ransom of a young Christian

slave of eleven years of age, named Haidee, the acknowledged

daughter of the late lord Ali Tepelini, pasha of Yanina, and

of Vasiliki, his favorite; she having been sold to me seven

years previously, with her mother, who had died on arriving

at Constantinople, by a French colonel in the service of the

Vizier Ali Tepelini, named Fernand Mondego. The

above-mentioned purchase was made on his highness's account,

whose mandate I had, for the sum of four hundred thousand

francs.

 

"`Given at Constantinople, by authority of his highness, in

the year 1247 of the Hegira.

 

"`Signed El-Kobbir.'

 

"`That this record should have all due authority, it shall

bear the imperial seal, which the vendor is bound to have

affixed to it.'

 

"Near the merchant's signature there was, indeed, the seal

of the sublime emperor. A dreadful silence followed the

reading of this document; the count could only stare, and

his gaze, fixed as if unconsciously on Haidee, seemed one of

fire and blood. `Madame,' said the president, `may reference

be made to the Count of Monte Cristo, who is now, I believe,

in Paris?' -- `Sir,' replied Haidee, `the Count of Monte

Cristo, my foster-father, has been in Normandy the last

three days.'

 

"`Who, then, has counselled you to take this step, one for

which the court is deeply indebted to you, and which is

perfectly natural, considering your birth and your

misfortunes?' -- `Sir,' replied Haidee, `I have been led to

take this step from a feeling of respect and grief. Although

a Christian, may God forgive me, I have always sought to

revenge my illustrious father. Since I set my foot in

France, and knew the traitor lived in Paris, I have watched

carefully. I live retired in the house of my noble

protector, but I do it from choice. I love retirement and

silence, because I can live with my thoughts and

recollections of past days. But the Count of Monte Cristo

surrounds me with every paternal care, and I am ignorant of

nothing which passes in the world. I learn all in the

silence of my apartments, -- for instance, I see all the

newspapers, every periodical, as well as every new piece of

music; and by thus watching the course of the life of

others, I learned what had transpired this morning in the

House of Peers, and what was to take place this evening;

then I wrote.'

 

"`Then,' remarked the president, `the Count of Monte Cristo

knows nothing of your present proceedings?' -- `He is quite

unaware of them, and I have but one fear, which is that he

should disapprove of what I have done. But it is a glorious

day for me,' continued the young girl, raising her ardent

gaze to heaven, `that on which I find at last an opportunity

of avenging my father!'

 

"The count had not uttered one word the whole of this time.

His colleagues looked at him, and doubtless pitied his

prospects, blighted under the perfumed breath of a woman.

His misery was depicted in sinister lines on his

countenance. `M. de Morcerf,' said the president, `do you

recognize this lady as the daughter of Ali Tepelini, pasha

of Yanina?' -- `No,' said Morcerf, attempting to rise, `it

is a base plot, contrived by my enemies.' Haidee, whose eyes

had been fixed on the door, as if expecting some one, turned

hastily, and, seeing the count standing, shrieked, `You do

not know me?' said she. `Well, I fortunately recognize you!

You are Fernand Mondego, the French officer who led the

troops of my noble father! It is you who surrendered the

castle of Yanina! It is you who, sent by him to

Constantinople, to treat with the emperor for the life or

death of your benefactor, brought back a false mandate

granting full pardon! It is you who, with that mandate,

obtained the pasha's ring, which gave you authority over

Selim, the fire-keeper! It is you who stabbed Selim. It is

you who sold us, my mother and me, to the merchant,

El-Kobbir! Assassin, assassin, assassin, you have still on

your brow your master's blood! Look, gentlemen, all!'

 

"These words had been pronounced with such enthusiasm and

evident truth, that every eye was fixed on the count's

forehead, and he himself passed his hand across it, as if he

felt Ali's blood still lingering there. `You positively

recognize M. de Morcerf as the officer, Fernand Mondego?' --

`Indeed I do!' cried Haidee. `Oh, my mother, it was you who

said, "You were free, you had a beloved father, you were

destined to be almost a queen. Look well at that man; it is

he who raised your father's head on the point of a spear; it

is he who sold us; it is he who forsook us! Look well at his

right hand, on which he has a large wound; if you forgot his

features, you would know him by that hand, into which fell,

one by one, the gold pieces of the merchant El-Kobbir!" I

know him! Ah, let him say now if he does not recognize me!'

Each word fell like a dagger on Morcerf, and deprived him of

a portion of his energy; as she uttered the last, he hid his

mutilated hand hastily in his bosom, and fell back on his

seat, overwhelmed by wretchedness and despair. This scene

completely changed the opinion of the assembly respecting

the accused count.

 

"`Count of Morcerf,' said the president, `do not allow

yourself to be cast down; answer. The justice of the court

is supreme and impartial as that of God; it will not suffer

you to be trampled on by your enemies without giving you an

opportunity of defending yourself. Shall further inquiries

be made? Shall two members of the House be sent to Yanina?

Speak!' Morcerf did not reply. Then all the members looked

at each other with terror. They knew the count's energetic

and violent temper; it must be, indeed, a dreadful blow

which would deprive him of courage to defend himself. They

expected that his stupefied silence would be followed by a

fiery outburst. `Well,' asked the president, `what is your

decision?'

 

"`I have no reply to make,' said the count in a low tone.

 

"`Has the daughter of Ali Tepelini spoken the truth?' said

the president. `Is she, then, the terrible witness to whose

charge you dare not plead "Not guilty"? Have you really

committed the crimes of which you are accused?' The count

looked around him with an expression which might have

softened tigers, but which could not disarm his judges. Then

he raised his eyes towards the ceiling, but withdrew then,

immediately, as if he feared the roof would open and reveal

to his distressed view that second tribunal called heaven,

and that other judge named God. Then, with a hasty movement,

he tore open his coat, which seemed to stifle him, and flew

from the room like a madman; his footstep was heard one

moment in the corridor, then the rattling of his

carriage-wheels as he was driven rapidly away. `Gentlemen,'

said the president, when silence was restored, `is the Count

of Morcerf convicted of felony, treason, and conduct

unbecoming a member of this House?' -- `Yes,' replied all

the members of the committee of inquiry with a unanimous

voice.

 

"Haidee had remained until the close of the meeting. She

heard the count's sentence pronounced without betraying an

expression of joy or pity; then drawing her veil over her

face she bowed majestically to the councillors, and left

with that dignified step which Virgil attributes to his

goddesses."

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

About the Book- The Count of Monte Cristo

About- The Count of Monte Cristo The Count of Monte Cristo (French: Le Comte de Monte-Cristo) is an adventure novel by Alexandre Dumas. It is often considered, along with The Three Musketeers, as Dumas' most popular work. It is also among the highest selling books of all time. The writing of the work was completed in 1844. Like many of his novels, it is expanded from the plot outlines suggested by his collaborating ghostwriter Auguste Maquet.[1] The story takes place in France, Italy, islands in the Mediterranean and the Levant during the historical events of 1815–1838 (from just before the Hundred Days through the reign of Louis-Philippe of France). The historical setting is a fundamental element of the book. It is primarily concerned with themes of hope, justice, vengeance, mercy, and forgiveness, and is told in the style of an adventure story. Buy the Penguin Classics Version of "Count of Monte Cristo"   Characters There are a large number of char

Chapter 88- The Insult.

Chapter 88 The Insult.   At the banker's door Beauchamp stopped Morcerf. "Listen," said he; "just now I told you it was of M. de Monte Cristo you must demand an explanation."   "Yes; and we are going to his house."   "Reflect, Morcerf, one moment before you go."   "On what shall I reflect?"   "On the importance of the step you are taking."   "Is it more serious than going to M. Danglars?"   "Yes; M. Danglars is a money-lover, and those who love money, you know, think too much of what they risk to be easily induced to fight a duel. The other is, on the contrary, to all appearance a true nobleman; but do you not fear to find him a bully?"   "I only fear one thing; namely, to find a man who will not fight."   "Do not be alarmed," said Beauchamp; "he will meet you. My only fear is that he will be too strong for you."  

Chapter 64- The Beggar.

Chapter 64 The Beggar.   The evening passed on; Madame de Villefort expressed a desire to return to Paris, which Madame Danglars had not dared to do, notwithstanding the uneasiness she experienced. On his wife's request, M. de Villefort was the first to give the signal of departure. He offered a seat in his landau to Madame Danglars, that she might be under the care of his wife. As for M. Danglars, absorbed in an interesting conversation with M. Cavalcanti, he paid no attention to anything that was passing. While Monte Cristo had begged the smelling-bottle of Madame de Villefort, he had noticed the approach of Villefort to Madame Danglars, and he soon guessed all that had passed between them, though the words had been uttered in so low a voice as hardly to be heard by Madame Danglars. Without opposing their arrangements, he allowed Morrel, Chateau-Renaud, and Debray to leave on horseback, and the ladies in M. de Villefort's carriage. Dang