The Three Musketeers

by

Alexandre Dumas

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The Three Musketeers: Situational Irony 6 key examples

Chapter 16
Explanation and Analysis—Presiding Magistrate:

In Chapter 16, Dumas describes Chancellor Séguier, the cardinal's servant who conducts an intrusive search of the queen's chambers for incriminating evidence about her affair with the Duke of Buckingham. Séguier's history is rife with situational irony that Dumas uses to satirize the way power worked in the Ancien Régime:

After three months, either because the devil gave up the struggle or the monks succumbed to exhaustion, no one knows which, the penitent [Séguier] returned to the outside world with the reputation of having suffered from the most terrible case of demonic possession that had ever been observed.

After leaving the monastery he entered the legal profession and eventually succeeded his uncle as presiding magistrate of the High Court.

According to Dumas's description, Séguier entered the monastery after a "stormy youth" with the hopes of reforming. The monks are unsuccessful in reforming him. Dumas jokingly describes Séguier's failure to suppress his sexuality and the monks' fatigue as they try and fail, day and night, to exorcise him. Dumas even suggests that Séguier got a perverse enjoyment out of the monks' violent exorcisms, to the point that he started calling for their "help" at more and more frequent intervals. In this passage, Dumas states that no one knows whether the demon or the monks gave up first. Given how stubborn the "demon" seems to have been, there is a strong tongue-in-cheek implication that the monks kicked him out of the monastery unreformed so that they could finally get some rest.

The bawdy comedy of this entire backstory serves to make Séguier look bad. If he is really still possessed by a demon (or at the very least unable to temper his own desires), Dumas imagines that his readers will see him as terribly unfit to hold a position of power. And yet, ironically, as soon as he leaves the monastery, he immediately takes advantage of his family connections to become "presiding magistrate of the High Court." He now works directly for the cardinal. Dumas was writing in the 1840s, about half a century after the Ancien Régime in France was replaced by a republican government and a more democratic social hierarchy. There were still debates going on about the best form of government. Dumas satirizes the way the old system gave power to people solely on the basis of their families, regardless of the fact that many of these people were utterly unfit to wield such power.

Chapter 18
Explanation and Analysis—The Cardinal's Money:

In Chapter 18, d'Artagnan agrees to help Madame Bonacieux get the queen's diamond tags back from the Duke of Buckingham as long as she can help him pay for the mission. When Madame Bonacieux hands d'Artagnan a bag of money the cardinal gave her husband, d'Artagnan remarks on the situational irony:

She opened a cupboard and took out the bag that her husband had caressed so lovingly half an hour earlier.

“Here, take this.”

“The money from the cardinal!” he exclaimed, laughing, for, as we have said, he had overheard the whole conversation between Madame Bonacieux and her husband.

“Yes, it’s from the cardinal,” she replied. “So it’s perfectly respectable.”

“It will be twice as amusing to save the queen with His Eminence’s money!”

The cardinal gave the money to Monsieur Bonacieux as a reward for spying on his wife and the queen. There is a game of cat and mouse going on here. The reason the queen needs the diamond tags back from the Duke of Buckingham is that the cardinal is trying to set her up to be publicly shamed for infidelity. The king originally gave her a set of 12 diamond tags, which she in turn gave to the Duke of Buckingham as a token of her love. The cardinal knows this and has suggested that the king throw a ball and request that the queen wear the tags. Monsieur Bonacieux, whose wife works for the queen, has informed the cardinal (in return for payment) that the queen is trying to get the Duke of Buckingham to give the tags back in time for the ball. The cardinal has hatched a plan to stop this from happening.

D'Artagnan, who is Monsieur Bonacieux's tenant, has overheard the conversation between him and the cardinal. He is eager to help Madame Bonacieux and the queen by making sure the Duke of Buckingham gets the message and by bringing the diamond tags back himself. Whereas Milady later becomes the primary villain of the novel, the cardinal is the main antagonist at this point. D'Artagnan finds it deliciously ironic that his journey to England will be financed by the cardinal himself. Ultimately, the cardinal's decision to pay Monsiuer Bonacieux to spy on his wife is what leads to his own downfall.

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Chapter 32
Explanation and Analysis—Archipelago Soup:

In Chapter 32, Dumas uses a vivid simile to emphasize the situational irony of Porthos's lackluster dinner at Madame Coquenard's house:

Porthos did not understand how the soup could look delicious to anyone: it was a pale, watery liquid with nothing showing in it except pieces of bread crust, and there were so few of them that they floated like the widely scattered islands of an archipelago.

Porthos has wheedled himself a dinner invitation in the hopes of getting Madame Coquenard to let him into the legendary and mysterious trunk that supposedly contains her husband's fortune. He is also looking forward to a home-cooked feast. As he sits through dinner, which Monsieur Coquenard seems genuinely to enjoy, it becomes clear that he might have been trying too hard to make it to the Coquenards' dinner table. The food is, to put it bluntly, terrible. When the soup comes out, it has no meat, vegetables, or even hearty broth to speak of. All that appears to be in it are measly crusts of bread that float in the watery liquid "like the widely scattered islands of an archipelago." A single bowl hardly has room for many "widely scattered" crusts of bread, so there can't even be much in the way of bread in the soup. It is easy to imagine what crusts there are growing more soggy by the moment.

The simile conjures the idea of exploring the globe in search of riches, a popular form of speculation in the 17th century. Exploring was a high-risk, high-reward activity. European explorers might happen upon gold mines, but many of them found land that didn't immediately yield much. Porthos has come to the Coquenards' house on an exploratory mission, with high hopes of finding enormous riches. Ironically, what he has found instead is a painfully awkward dinner party with bad food.

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Chapter 52
Explanation and Analysis—Sleeping Soundly:

At the end of Chapter 52 and beginning of Chapter 53, Dumas emphasizes the situational irony of Milady's beautiful, peaceful slumber while she dreams of horrifying imagery:

She went to bed and fell asleep with a smile on her lips. Anyone seeing her would have taken her for a young girl dreaming of the wreath of flowers she would wear at the next village festival.

[...]

MILADY WAS actually dreaming that she had d’Artagnan in her power at last and was watching his execution, and it was the sight of his odious blood flowing beneath the headsman’s axe that had brought that charming smile to her lips.

She slept soundly, lulled by her first hope of escape.

From the outside, Milady is the image of "a young girl dreaming of the wreath of flowers she would wear at the next village festival." There is a sharp contrast between her "innocent" appearance and the real contents of her dreams, which Dumas shares with the reader at the opening of Chapter 53. The image of "odious blood flowing beneath the headsman's axe" at d'Artagnan's imagined execution is startling to readers. To Milady, it is soothing. It "lulls" her and makes her smile to think of escaping and bringing about d'Artagnan's bloody demise.

Dumas depicts Milady as an especially dangerous villain because she can project such an ironic air of innocence. Over and over throughout her life, she convinces men that she is the "young girl dreaming" that she looks like on the outside. The false sense of security she inspires in them makes them all the more vulnerable to her vicious schemes. Dumas recreates this false sense of security for the reader by presenting the peaceful image of Milady before the chapter break and the terrifying image only after a pause between chapters. She embodies the false dichotomy of innocence and deception that is often projected onto women in literature and media. Her duplicitous villainy keeps the story exciting, but it is important to note that it relies on some troubling stereotypes about women.

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Chapter 53
Explanation and Analysis—Sleeping Soundly:

At the end of Chapter 52 and beginning of Chapter 53, Dumas emphasizes the situational irony of Milady's beautiful, peaceful slumber while she dreams of horrifying imagery:

She went to bed and fell asleep with a smile on her lips. Anyone seeing her would have taken her for a young girl dreaming of the wreath of flowers she would wear at the next village festival.

[...]

MILADY WAS actually dreaming that she had d’Artagnan in her power at last and was watching his execution, and it was the sight of his odious blood flowing beneath the headsman’s axe that had brought that charming smile to her lips.

She slept soundly, lulled by her first hope of escape.

From the outside, Milady is the image of "a young girl dreaming of the wreath of flowers she would wear at the next village festival." There is a sharp contrast between her "innocent" appearance and the real contents of her dreams, which Dumas shares with the reader at the opening of Chapter 53. The image of "odious blood flowing beneath the headsman's axe" at d'Artagnan's imagined execution is startling to readers. To Milady, it is soothing. It "lulls" her and makes her smile to think of escaping and bringing about d'Artagnan's bloody demise.

Dumas depicts Milady as an especially dangerous villain because she can project such an ironic air of innocence. Over and over throughout her life, she convinces men that she is the "young girl dreaming" that she looks like on the outside. The false sense of security she inspires in them makes them all the more vulnerable to her vicious schemes. Dumas recreates this false sense of security for the reader by presenting the peaceful image of Milady before the chapter break and the terrifying image only after a pause between chapters. She embodies the false dichotomy of innocence and deception that is often projected onto women in literature and media. Her duplicitous villainy keeps the story exciting, but it is important to note that it relies on some troubling stereotypes about women.

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Chapter 59
Explanation and Analysis—Last Kiss of Love:

In Chapter 59, Felton assassinates the Duke of Buckingham after Milady manipulates him into it. The duke's death scene is full of situational irony, which Dumas drives home with a simile:

He looked around for some precious object, but his eyes, dimmed by the approach of death, encountered only the bloody knife that Felton had dropped.

“Give her that knife,” he said, clasping La Porte’s hand.

He found the strength to put the knife and the satin bag into the box, then he shook his head to tell La Porte that he could no longer speak. 

[...]

Buckingham tried to smile, but death stopped his thought and it remained engraved on his face like a last kiss of love.

Right after he was stabbed, the duke received a letter from Queen Anne warning him that he was in danger as a result of their affair, over the course of which they have made some very dangerous people angry. It is ironic enough that he receives the warning a moment too late. To make matters worse, the queen warned him before the incident with the diamond tags that they should stop seeing one another. The duke's convincing the queen to continue their relationship and to give him the diamond tags as a token of her love is what has led to Milady and the cardinal's desire for revenge. The duke spends the last seconds of his life trying to find something significant to leave behind for the queen, whom he still loves. The only thing he can find is the bloody knife, which is a horrifying but ironically honest memento of their relationship.

When Buckingham tries and fails to smile, his final thought gets frozen on his face "like a last kiss of love." It is not precisely clear what this thought is, but it has something to do with Queen Anne and the bloody knife. The duke seems to have finally realized that their affair was doomed from the start. And yet he still can't let go of it. The simile comparing his frozen expression to "a last kiss of love" suggests that at the moment of death, the greatest tragedy and the greatest love of his life are all tied up in one another. His stabbing is awful, but it also reinforces his love for the queen by turning their relationship into the overarching story of his life.

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Chapter 67
Explanation and Analysis—Richelieu's Note:

In Chapter 67, the cardinal has d'Artagnan arrested. In a twist of situational irony, d'Artagnan hands the cardinal a note in his own hand that pardons the bearer of all crimes:

D’Artagnan handed him the precious letter that Athos had taken from Milady and later given to d’Artagnan as a safeguard.

The cardinal took it and slowly read it aloud, stressing each word:

“The bearer of this letter has acted under my orders and for the good of the State. Richelieu”

The cardinal first gave this note to Milady when she was carrying out nefarious deeds on his behalf. As Dumas reminds the reader here, Athos took the note from her and gave it to d'Artagnan to hold onto. Although the cardinal ends up deciding to burn the note and erase all evidence of it, it is a clever power play for d'Artagnan to hand over the note in this scene. Given Milady's many aliases and need to keep her true identity a secret, the cardinal never specified in writing who "the bearer of this letter" is supposed to be. Technically, d'Artagnan is now the bearer. The note the cardinal first signed to help Milady get away with working against the musketeers is now being thrown back in his face.

D'Artagnan may have been able to use the note more effectively if he had handed it to someone who did know that it was never intended for him. However, giving it to the cardinal allows d'Artagnan to demonstrate that he is crafty. This very display of smarts seems to tip the cardinal's opinion in his favor. Realizing that d'Artagnan might be useful to him in the future, the cardinal chooses to form an alliance with him instead of having him executed.

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