[The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas]@TWC D-Link bookThe Three Musketeers 1 THE THREE PRESENTS OF D'ARTAGNAN THE ELDER 7/20
He began as you begin.
Go to him with this letter, and make him your model in order that you may do as he has done." Upon which M.d'Artagnan the elder girded his own sword round his son, kissed him tenderly on both cheeks, and gave him his benediction. On leaving the paternal chamber, the young man found his mother, who was waiting for him with the famous recipe of which the counsels we have just repeated would necessitate frequent employment.
The adieux were on this side longer and more tender than they had been on the other--not that M.d'Artagnan did not love his son, who was his only offspring, but M.d'Artagnan was a man, and he would have considered it unworthy of a man to give way to his feelings; whereas Mme.
d'Artagnan was a woman, and still more, a mother.
She wept abundantly; and--let us speak it to the praise of M.d'Artagnan the younger--notwithstanding the efforts he made to remain firm, as a future Musketeer ought, nature prevailed, and he shed many tears, of which he succeeded with great difficulty in concealing the half. The same day the young man set forward on his journey, furnished with the three paternal gifts, which consisted, as we have said, of fifteen crowns, the horse, and the letter for M.de Treville--the counsels being thrown into the bargain. With such a VADE MECUM d'Artagnan was morally and physically an exact copy of the hero of Cervantes, to whom we so happily compared him when our duty of an historian placed us under the necessity of sketching his portrait.
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