THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO ALEXANDRE DUMAS CHAPTER 64 Đây là một tác phẩm anh ngữ nổi tiếng với những từ vựng nâng cao chuyên ngành văn chương. Nhằm giúp các bạn yêu thich tiếng anh luyện tập và củng cố thêm kỹ năng đọc tiếng anh . | THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO ALEXANDRE DUMAS CHAPTER 64 The Beggar. The evening passed on Madame de Villefort expressed a desire to return to Paris which Madame Danglars had not dared to do notwithstanding the uneasiness she experienced. On his wife s request M. de Villefort was the first to give the signal of departure. He offered a seat in his landau to Madame Danglars that she might be under the care of his wife. As for M. Danglars absorbed in an interesting conversation with M. Cavalcanti he paid no attention to anything that was passing. While Monte Cristo had begged the smelling-bottle of Madame de Villefort he had noticed the approach of Villefort to Madame Danglars and he soon guessed all that had passed between them though the words had been uttered in so low a voice as hardly to be heard by Madame Danglars. Without opposing their arrangements he allowed Morrel Chateau-Renaud and Debray to leave on horseback and the ladies in M. de Villefort s carriage. Danglars more and more delighted with Major Cavalcanti had offered him a seat in his carriage. Andrea Cavalcanti found his tilbury waiting at the door the groom in every respect a caricature of the English fashion was standing on tiptoe to hold a large iron-gray horse. Andrea had spoken very little during dinner he was an intelligent lad and he feared to utter some absurdity before so many grand people amongst whom with dilating eyes he saw the king s attorney. Then he had been seized upon by Danglars who with a rapid glance at the stiff-necked old major and his modest son and taking into consideration the hospitality of the count made up his mind that he was in the society of some nabob come to Paris to finish the worldly education of his heir. He contemplated with unspeakable delight the large diamond which shone on the major s little finger for the major like a prudent man in case of any accident happening to his bank-notes had immediately converted them into an available asset. Then after dinner on the .