![]() Generations of readers have responded to Dumas's riveting, romantic tale of revenge by a man who believes he acts as the agent of Providence. When Picaud was released in 1814, he took possession of the treasure, returned under another name to Paris and spent ten years plotting his successful revenge against his former friends. During his imprisonment a dying fellow prisoner bequeathed him a treasure hidden in Milan. ![]() Picaud was engaged to marry a rich woman, but four jealous friends falsely accused him of being a spy for England. ![]() ![]() Peuchet related the story of a shoemaker named Francois Picaud, who was living in Paris in 1807. On Dantès's escape, he acquires the treasure, gives himself the name Count of Monte Cristo, and ruthlessly goes about the slow destruction of his enemies.ĭumas got the idea for The Count of Monte Cristo from a true story, which he found in a memoir written by a man named Jacques Peuchet. A fellow prisoner tells him where to find treasure buried on a Mediterranean island called Monte Cristo. Set in Marseilles, Rome and Paris in the nineteenth century, it tells the story of Edmond Dantès, a young sailor who is falsely accused of treason and imprisoned in a dungeon for fourteen years. The Count of Monte Cristo (Paris, 1844–45), by French novelist and playwright Alexandre Dumas, is one of the most popular novels ever written. ![]()
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