The Three Musketeers (Translated by Richard Pevear) - Alexandre Dumas [10]
And this sensation had been all the more painful to the young d’Artagnan (as the Don Quixote of this other Rosinante was called), in that he was unable to conceal the ridiculous side lent to him, good horseman that he was, by such a mount; indeed, he had sighed deeply on accepting the gift of it from M. d’Artagnan Sr. He was not unaware that such a beast was worth at least twenty livres; but in truth the words that had accompanied the gift were beyond price.
“My son,” the Gascon gentleman had said, in that pure Béarnais patois of which Henri IV4 had never managed to rid himself, “my son, this horse was born in your father’s house some thirteen years ago, and has remained there ever since, which should bring you to love it. Never sell it, let it die peacefully and honorably of old age, and if you go on campaign with it, handle it as you would an old servant. At court,” M. d’Artagnan Sr. went on, “if you should have the honor of going there, an honor to which, moreover, your old nobility entitles you, uphold worthily your gentleman’s name, which has been borne worthily by your ancestors for more than five hundred years. For you and yours—by yours I mean your relations and your friends—never bear with anything except from M. le cardinal and the king. It is by his courage, understand me well, it is by his courage alone that a gentleman makes his way nowadays. He who trembles for a second may let the bait escape which, for just that second, fortune held out to him. You are young, you must be brave for two reasons: first, because you are a Gascon, and second, because you are my son. Do not shrink from opportunities and seek out adventures. I have taught you to handle a sword; you have legs of iron, a fist of steel; fight whenever you can; fight all the more because duels are forbidden, and therefore it takes twice the courage to fight. All I can give you, my son, is fifteen écus, my horse, and the advice you have just heard. Your mother will add the recipe for a certain balm, which she got from a Bohemian woman, and which has the miraculous virtue of healing every wound that does not attain the heart. Take your profit from everything, and live happily and long. I have only one more word to add, and it is an example I propose to you—not my own, because as for me, I have never appeared at court and only fought as a volunteer in the wars of religion;5 I mean to speak of M. de Tréville, who was my neighbor once upon a time, and who had the honor while still a child of playing with our King Louis XIIIth, God keep him! Sometimes their games degenerated into fighting, and in these fights the king was not always the stronger. The blows he received gave him much esteem and friendship for M. de Tréville. Later M. de Tréville fought against others during his first trip to Paris, five times; from the death of the late king to the coming of age of the young one, not counting wars and sieges, seven times; and from that coming of age till today, maybe a hundred times! And so, despite edicts, rulings, and writs, here he is captain of the musketeers, that is, head of a legion of Caesars which the king sets great store by, and which the cardinal fears, he who does not fear much, as everyone knows. What’s more, M. de Tréville earns ten thousand écus a year; so he is a very great lord. He began like you. Go to see him with this letter, and rule yourself by him, in order to become like him.”
Upon which, M. d’Artagnan Sr. buckled his own sword on his son, kissed him tenderly on both cheeks, and gave him his blessing.
On coming out of the paternal chamber, the young man found his mother, who was waiting for him with the famous recipe, a rather frequent use of which would be necessitated