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Chapters 21–25
Chapter 21: The Isle of Tiboulen
Dantès manages to cut himself loose from the shroud and
swims in the direction of an uninhabited island he remembers from
his sailing days. When he feels that he cannot swim any longer,
he washes up on the jagged rocks of the island. A storm erupts,
and Dantès watches helplessly as a small boat crashes against the
rocks, killing all the men on board. He then sees a Genoese ship
in the distance and realizes that this ship is his one chance to
finalize his escape. He takes the cap of one of the dead sailors
off the point of a rock and makes his way to the ship, using a piece
of driftwood from the destroyed boat as a float. Dantès tells the
men on the ship that he was the lone survivor among the sailors
who crashed on the rocks during the storm. His long hair and beard
arouse the men’s suspicion, but Dantès passes his shagginess off
as a religious pledge made to God in a time of danger. The men believe
his story and offer to take him on as one of their crew. Chapter 22: The Smugglers
Dantès quickly realizes that the men on the ship are smugglers,
but he makes himself useful to them, and they all grow to love him.
He patiently waits for a chance to land on the island of Monte Cristo. This
chance finally presents itself when the ship’s captain decides to use
the deserted island as the site for an illegal transaction. Chapter 23: The Isle of Monte Cristo
While on the island, Dantès pretends to injure himself
and claims that he cannot be moved. He urges the men to leave him
behind and return for him after a week. Dantès’s best friend among
the crew, Jacopo, offers to stay behind, forgoing his share of the
profits from the smuggling operation. Dantès is moved by this selfless
display, but refuses the offer. Chapter 24: The Search
Once the men are gone, Dantès begins searching for Faria’s
treasure. He uses his enormous ingenuity to uncover the fortune,
which is even greater than he had imagined. Dantès falls on his
knees and utters a prayer to God, to whom he attributes this windfall. Chapter 25: At Marseilles Again
Dantès fills his pockets with a few precious stones from
his trove and waits for the sailors to return. He then sails with
them to Leghorn, where he sells the four smallest diamonds for five
thousand francs each. The following day, Dantès buys a small ship
and crew for Jacopo in order to reward his friend’s kindness. His
one condition for the gift is that Jacopo sail to Marseilles and
ask for news of a man named Louis Dantès and a woman named Mercédès.
Dantès takes his leave of the smugglers and buys a yacht
with a secret compartment. He sails the yacht back to Monte Cristo
and transfers the remainder of the treasure to the secret compartment
of the yacht. Jacopo arrives on the island several days later with
sad news: Louis Dantès is dead and Mercédès has disappeared. Dantès tries
to hide his extreme emotion and sails for Marseilles. Analysis: Chapters 21–25
Just as Dantès’s imprisonment is portrayed as a sort of
death, his escape is cast as a sort of rebirth. Dantès emerges into
the free world by way of water, clearly a symbolic reference to
the Christian tradition of baptism, in which a newborn baby is doused
with water in order to dedicate its soul to God. Dantès is reborn
as a man with a single mission—to avenge the wrongs done to him.
His baptismal pledge, then, can be seen as a pledge to carry out
this vengeance, which he believes is God’s will. Signs
of Dantès’s transformation emerge immediately, as we see when he
boards the smugglers’ ship bearing falsehoods about his identity.
The Dantès of the early chapters is a compulsively honest man, yet
he now lies easily and skillfully about his identity. His constructs
his first lie without a second thought, and he follows with a barrage
of other untruths. Dantès’s radically different behavior indicates
that he is a new man, born during his imprisonment and baptized
during his watery escape.
Dumas challenges the rigid and judgmental expectations
of French society in portraying the smugglers as good, even admirable men.
The smugglers’ actions have little to do with justice in an ethical
sense. Indeed, though The Count of Monte Cristo is
a novel about justice, the concept of justice in the novel is deep
and complex, based on fundamental ethical rights rather than societal
law. Indeed, Dantès’s concept of justice does not at all match up
with civil society’s concept of justice. The distinction between
Dantès’s concept of justice and society’s concept of justice is
further underscored by the fact that the public prosecutor, Villefort—who,
we see later, is portrayed as the human arbiter of societal law—is
cast as a vile and unjust character. Dumas’s message is clear: societal
justice is really no justice at all, as it punishes moral and good
people for petty crimes that have nothing to do with real justice,
while rewarding the vile and unethical with wealth and power.
In Chapter 24, Dumas begins to
explore an important difference between lives filled with hope and
lives filled with hopelessness. Preparing himself for the disappointment
of not finding the treasure, Dantès reflects that “[t]he heart breaks
when, after having been elated by flattering hopes, it sees all
these illusions destroyed.” He thus acknowledges that hope is what
keeps a human being going and that hopelessness is the only thing
that destroys the human spirit. Dantès begins to understand that
happiness and despair stem from expectations, not from what one
actually has or does not have. With all his desires now pinned on
enacting his revenge, Dantès realizes that he faces the possibility
of falling into despair once again if he finds no treasure and thus
cannot hope to carry out his revenge. He attempts to dim his hopes
in order to save himself the crippling pain that would result if
he finds these hopes thwarted.
When Dantès locates the treasure, he considers the event
both “joyous and terrible,” because he knows that with this wealth,
he must now begin the obsessive, dark endeavor that will consume
him for the next decade. He must sever ties to normal human life
and devote himself to destroying his enemies. This daunting task
is made possible by his fortune alone, and so the fortune itself
frightens him. Only when Dantès prays is he able to feel the day
is at all “joyous.” His prayer calms the feelings of horror and
revulsion that the sight of his treasure stirs up and convinces
him that God supports his mission of revenge. Dantès convinces himself
that only God could have orchestrated the successful discovery of
such an enormous treasure, and that the treasure exists for the
very purpose of carrying out a terrible punishment on Dantès’s enemies.
As we see later, Dantès’s conviction that God
is using him as an instrument to carry out divine will continues
to buoy his determination throughout the novel. Given Dantès’s religious
interpretation of his mission, it is significant that the island
where he finds his treasure is called “Monte Cristo,” which in Italian
means “the mountain of Christ.” This religious conception of his
mission and Dantès’s certainty about its legitimacy allow him to
overlook the “terrible” aspect of his discovery and bask in its
“joyous” aspect. |
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