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The Three Musketeers, Version 2

The Three Musketeers, Version 2

Author(s): ,

Genre(s):

Narrators:

Number of Chapters: 69

Length: 26 hours and 40 minutes

Language: English

D’Artagnan, son of a poor Gascon aristocrat, travels to Paris to seek his fortune. His family connections enable him to obtain a position in a Guard regiment. His provincial ingenuousness and his hot-headed sense of honor earn him three duels in as many hours. Thankfully, his preparation with the sword is sufficient to recommend himself to his Musketeer antagonists, and they – Athos, Porthos, and Aramis – become his fast friends.

But fate also crosses D’Artagnan’s path with some dangerous people who become his opponents: a mysterious “man from Meung” and a woman who styles herself Milady, who has formidable seduction skills and a heart that is mean and violent. Fate also inserts D’Artagnan and his Musketeer friends squarely in the middle of a love triangle of heroic proportions – between Anne of Austria (the Queen of France), George Villiers (the Duke of Buckingham, France’s enemy), and the great spymaster, his Eminence the Cardinal Richelieu. Both of these gentlemen can command the armed forces of their respective countries to battle simply for the pleasure of beating the other. And the Musketeers must serve and risk life and limb at the siege of La Rochelle, a place where the Duke and the Cardinal have chosen to match wills.

In this age it was common for young cavaliers to live off the gifts of rich mistresses, and the four friends are certainly, it seems, bereft otherwise, although all are respectably employed as guardsmen to the King himself. Their love connections weave a further web about them which often seems to sidetrack their duty to King and country.

It takes all the efforts of the four to fend off the lethal consequences of mixing in the affairs of their betters and the slings and arrows (not to mention the musket and cannon balls!) of their outrageous fortunes. (Mark F. Smith)

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Author's Preface (Mark F. Smith)
The Three Presents of D'Artagnan the Elder (Mark F. Smith)
The Antechamber of M. de Treville (Mark F. Smith)
The Audience (Mark F. Smith)
The Shoulder, The Baldric, and The Handkerchief (Mark F. Smith)
The King's Musketeers and The Cardinal's Guards (Mark F. Smith)
His Majesty King Louis XIII (Mark F. Smith)
The Interior of the Musketeers (Mark F. Smith)
Concerning a Court Intrigue (Mark F. Smith)
D'Artagnan Shows Himself (Mark F. Smith)
A Mousetrap in the Seventeenth Century (Mark F. Smith)
In Which the Plot Thickens (Mark F. Smith)
George Villiers - Duke of Buckingham (Mark F. Smith)
Monsieur Bonacieux (Mark F. Smith)
The Man of Meung (Mark F. Smith)
Men of the Robe and Men of the Sword (Mark F. Smith)
In Which M. de Segurier, Keeper of the Seals, Looks More Than Once for the Bell (Mark F. Smith)
Bonacieux at Home (Mark F. Smith)
Lover and Husband (Mark F. Smith)
Plan of Campaign (Mark F. Smith)
The Journey (Mark F. Smith)
The Countess de Winter (Mark F. Smith)
The Ballet of La Merlaison (Mark F. Smith)
The Rendezvous (Mark F. Smith)
The Pavilion (Mark F. Smith)
Porthos (Mark F. Smith)
Aramis and His Thesis (Mark F. Smith)
The Wife of Athos (Mark F. Smith)
The Return (Mark F. Smith)
Hunting for the Equipments (Mark F. Smith)
D'Artagnan and the Englishman (Mark F. Smith)
English and French (Mark F. Smith)
A Procurator's Dinner (Mark F. Smith)
Mistress and Soubrette (Mark F. Smith)
In Which the Equipment of Porthos and Aramis Is Treated Of (Mark F. Smith)
A Gascon a Match for Cupid (Mark F. Smith)
Dream of Vengeance (Mark F. Smith)
Milady's Secret (Mark F. Smith)
How, Without Incommoding Himself, Athos Procures His Equipment (Mark F. Smith)
A Vision (Mark F. Smith)
A Terrible Vision (Mark F. Smith)
The Siege of La Rochelle (Mark F. Smith)
The Anjou Wine (Mark F. Smith)
The Sign of the Red Dovecot (Mark F. Smith)
The Utility of Stovepipes (Mark F. Smith)
A Conjugal Visit (Mark F. Smith)
The Bastion Saint-Gervais (Mark F. Smith)
The Council of the Musketeers (Mark F. Smith)
A Family Affair (Mark F. Smith)
A Fatality (Mark F. Smith)
Chat Between a Brother and Sister (Mark F. Smith)
Officer (Mark F. Smith)
Captivity: The First Day (Mark F. Smith)
Captivity: The Second Day (Mark F. Smith)
Captivity: the Third Day (Mark F. Smith)
Captivity: The Fourth Day (Mark F. Smith)
Captivity: The Fifth Day (Mark F. Smith)
Means of Classical Tragedy (Mark F. Smith)
Escape (Mark F. Smith)
What Happened at Portsmouth (Mark F. Smith)
In France (Mark F. Smith)
The Carmelite Convent at Bethune (Mark F. Smith)
Two Varieties of Demons (Mark F. Smith)
The Drop of Water (Mark F. Smith)
The Man in the Red Cloak (Mark F. Smith)
Trial (Mark F. Smith)
Execution (Mark F. Smith)
Conclusion (Mark F. Smith)
Epilogue (Mark F. Smith)
The audiobook The Three Musketeers, Version 2 falls under the genres of . It is written by , .