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Index
Copyright Page
Title Page
Contents
Introduction
Select Bibliography
LOUISE DE LA VALLIÈRE
I. King Louis XIV Does Not Think Mademoiselle De La VallièRe Either Rich Enough or Pretty Enough For a Gentleman of the Rank of the Vicomte De Bragelonne
II. D’Artagnan Calls De Wardes to Account
III. Baisemeaux De Montlezun
IV. The King’s Card-Table
V. M. Baisemeaux De Montlezun’s Accounts
VI. The Breakfast of Monsieur De Baisemeaux
VII. The Second Floor of La BertaudièRe
VIII. The Two Friends
IX. Madame De BellièRe’s Plate
X. The Dowry
XI. On the Sands at Calais
XII. Madame Amuses Herself
XIII. Lorraine Is Jealous
XIV. Monsieur Is Jealous of Guiche
XV. The Mediator
XVI. The Advisers
XVII. Fontainebleau
XVIII. The Bath
XIX. The Butterfly-Chase
XX. What Was Caught In the Hand After the Butterflies
XXI. The Ballet of the Seasons
XXII. The Nymphs of the Park of Fontainebleau
XXIII. Under the Royal Oak
XXIV. The King’s Uneasiness
XXV. The King’s Secret
XXVI. Midnight Rambles
XXVII. Madame Acquires a Proof That Listeners Can Hear What Is Said
XXVIII. Aramis’s Correspondence
XXIX. The Orderly Clerk
XXX. Fontainebleau at Two O’clock in the Morning
XXXI. The Labyrinth
XXXII. How Malicorne Had Been Turned Out of the Hotel of the Beau Paon
XXXIII. What Really Took Place at the Beau Paon
XXXIV. A Jesuit of the Eleventh Year
XXXV. The State Secret
XXXVI. A Special Mission
XXXVII. As Happy as a Prince
XXXVIII. The Story of a Dryad And of a Naiad
XXXIX. Conclusion of the Story of a Naiad And of a Dryad
XL. Royal Psychology
XLI. Showing What Neither the Naiad Nor Dryad Had Anticipated
XLII. The New General of the Jesuits
XLIII. The Storm
XLIV. The Shower of Rain
XLV. Toby
XLVI. Madame’s Four Chances
XLVII. The Lottery
XLVIII. Malaga
XLIX. A Letter From M. De Baisemeaux
L. In Which the Reader Will Be Delighted to Find That Porthos Has Lost Nothing of His Strength
LI. The Rat And the Cheese
LII. Planchet’s Country-House
LIII. Showing What Could Be Seen From Planchet’s House
LIV. How Porthos, TrüChen, And Planchet Parted With Each Other On Friendly Terms, Thanks to D’Artagnan
LV. The Presentation of Porthos at Court
LVI. Explanations
LVII. Madame And Guiche
LVIII. Montalais And Malicorne
LIX. How De Wardes Was Received at Court
LX. The Combat
LXI. The King’s Supper
LXII. After Supper
LXIII. Showing In What Way D’Artagnan Discharged the Mission With Which the King Had Entrusted Him
LXIV. The Encounter
LXV. The Physician
LXVI. Wherein D’Artagnan Perceives That It Was He Who Was Mistaken And Manicamp Who Was Right
LXVII. Showing the Advantage of Having Two Strings to One’s Bow
LXVIII. M. Malicorne the Keeper of the Records of the Realm of France
LXIX. The Journey
LXX. Triumfeminate
LXXI. The First Quarrel
LXXII. Despair
LXXIII. The Flight
LXXIV. Showing How Louis, On His Side, Had Passed the Time From Ten to Half-Past Twelve at Night
LXXV. The Ambassadors
LXXVI. Chaillot
LXXVII. Madame
LXXVIII. Mademoiselle De La VallièRe’s Pocket-Handkerchief
LXXIX. Which Treats of Gardeners, of Ladders, And Maids of Honour
LXXX. Which Treats of Carpentry Operations, And Furnishes Details Upon the Mode of Constructing Staircases
LXXXI. The Promenade By Torchlight
LXXXII. The Apparition
LXXXIII. The Portrait
LXXXIV. Hampton Court
LXXXV. The Courier From Madame
LXXXVI. Saint-Aignan Follows Malicorne’s Advice
List of Historical Characters
Explanatory Notes
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