Home   [800x750]    About


mist round this enchanted isle. Little could be seen of it, owing to this dazzling light, but the salient points; every shadow was strongly marked, and cut with bands of darkness the luminous fields and walls. "Eh! eh!" said D'Artagnan, at the aspect of those masses of black rocks, "these are fortifications which do not stand in need of any engineer to render a landing difficult. How the devil can a landing be effected on that isle which God has defended so completely?"
   "This way," replied the patron of the bark, changing the sail, and impressing upon the rudder a twist which turned the boat in the direction of a pretty little port, quite coquettish, round, and newly battlemented.
   "What the devil do I see yonder?" said D'Artagnan.
   "You see Leomaria," replied the fisherman.
   "Well, but there?"
   "That is Bragos."
   "And further on?"
   "Sanger, and then the palace."
   "Mordioux! It is a world. Ah! there are some soldiers."
   "There are seventeen hundred men in Belle-Isle, monsieur," replied the fisherman, proudly. "Do you know that the least garrison is of twenty companies of infantry?"
   "Mordioux!" cried D'Artagnan, stamping with his foot. "His Majesty was right enough."
   They landed.

   CHAPTER 69. In which the Reader, no doubt, will be as astonished as

D'Artagnan was to meet an Old Acquaintance
   There is always something in a landing, if it be only from the smallest sea-boat -- a trouble and a confusion which do not leave the mind the

Chapter available in: French Spanish Romanian Next