The Man in the Iron Mask by Alexandre Dumas (read 50 shades of grey .txt) 📗
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
Book online «The Man in the Iron Mask by Alexandre Dumas (read 50 shades of grey .txt) 📗». Author Alexandre Dumas
End of The Man in the Iron Mask. This is the last text in the series.
Footnotes
1 (return)
[ “He is patient because he is eternal.” is how the Latin translates. It is from St. Augustine. This motto was sometimes applied to the Papacy, but not to the Jesuits.]
2 (return)
[ In the five-volume edition, Volume 4 ends here.]
3 (return)
[ It is possible that the preceding conversation is an obscure allegorical allusion to the Fronde, or perhaps an intimation that the Duc was the father of Mordaunt, from Twenty Years After, but a definite interpretation still eludes modern scholars.]
4 (return)
[ The dictates of such a service would require Raoul to spend the rest of his life outside of France, hence Athos’s and Grimaud’s extreme reactions.]
5 (return)
[ Dumas here, and later in the chapter, uses the name Roncherat. Roncherolles is the actual name of the man.]
6 (return)
[ In some editions, “in spite of Milady” reads “in spite of malady”.]
7 (return)
[ “Pie” in this case refers to magpies, the prey for the falcons.]
8 (return)
[ Anne of Austria did not die until 1666, and Dumas sets the current year as 1665.]
9 (return)
[ Madame de Montespan would oust Louise from the king’s affections by 1667.]
10 (return)
[ De Guiche would not return to court until 1671.]
11 (return)
[ Madame did die of poison in 1670, shortly after returning from the mission described later. The Chevalier de Lorraine had actually been ordered out of France in 1662.]
12 (return)
[ This particular campaign did not actually occur until 1673.]
13 (return)
[ Jean-Paul Oliva was the actual general of the Jesuits from 1664-1681.]
14 (return)
[ In earlier editions, the last line reads, “Of the four valiant men whose history we have related, there now no longer remained but one single body; God had resumed the souls.” Dumas made the revision in later editions.]
This is a multi volume file
The index has links to all volumes.
There are two html files in each zipped html folder. The .....-h.htm file should be used if you wish to use a downloaded file off-line which will link to all the other files in the set which are still on-line. The .....-h2.htm file will be used only if you wish to build a complete off-line set of files as the links in this html file are designed only for off-line use. If you want to download all three volumes and have the links work on your own computer, then follow these directions carefully.
1. Create a directory (folder) named whatever you like (e.g., Maupassant). (The name of this directory (folder) is not critical, but the inner folders must be named as listed below, or the links between volumes will not work).
2. In that directory (folder) create as many directories (folders) as there are volumes in the set and name each of new folders after the original filename, for example:
20023 24780 286493. In each of the above directories you just created, create a directory of the same filename but this time in the pattern:
In the 20023 directory create a directory named 20023-h In the 24780 directory create a directory named 24780-h In the 28649 directory create a directory named 28649-h4. Download the zipped html version of each volume from the PG Catalog.
5. Unzip the downloaded files, you will find an html directory for example 20023-h which contains two html files named, for example, 20023-h.htm and 20023-h2.htm
Move the unzipped 20023-h2.htm file and its “images” directory into your new 20023-h directory. Move the unzipped 24780-h2.htm file and its “images” directory into your new 24780-h directory. Move the unzipped 28649-h2.htm file and its “images” directory into
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