<h3><SPAN name="linkC2HCH0022" id="linkC2HCH0022"></SPAN> Chapter 22. The Smugglers</h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>antès had not been a
day on board before he had a very clear idea of the men with whom his lot had
been cast. Without having been in the school of the Abbé Faria, the worthy
master of <i>La Jeune Amélie</i> (the name of the Genoese tartan) knew a
smattering of all the tongues spoken on the shores of that large lake called
the Mediterranean, from the Arabic to the Provençal, and this, while it spared
him interpreters, persons always troublesome and frequently indiscreet, gave
him great facilities of communication, either with the vessels he met at sea,
with the small boats sailing along the coast, or with the people without name,
country, or occupation, who are always seen on the quays of seaports, and who
live by hidden and mysterious means which we must suppose to be a direct gift
of Providence, as they have no visible means of support. It is fair to assume
that Dantès was on board a smuggler.</p>
<p>At first the captain had received Dantès on board with a certain degree of
distrust. He was very well known to the customs officers of the coast; and as
there was between these worthies and himself a perpetual battle of wits, he had
at first thought that Dantès might be an emissary of these industrious
guardians of rights and duties, who perhaps employed this ingenious means of
learning some of the secrets of his trade. But the skilful manner in which
Dantès had handled the lugger had entirely reassured him; and then, when he saw
the light plume of smoke floating above the bastion of the Château d’If,
and heard the distant report, he was instantly struck with the idea that he had
on board his vessel one whose coming and going, like that of kings, was
accompanied with salutes of artillery. This made him less uneasy, it must be
owned, than if the new-comer had proved to be a customs officer; but this
supposition also disappeared like the first, when he beheld the perfect
tranquillity of his recruit.</p>
<p>Edmond thus had the advantage of knowing what the owner was, without the owner
knowing who he was; and however the old sailor and his crew tried to
“pump” him, they extracted nothing more from him; he gave accurate
descriptions of Naples and Malta, which he knew as well as Marseilles, and held
stoutly to his first story. Thus the Genoese, subtle as he was, was duped by
Edmond, in whose favor his mild demeanor, his nautical skill, and his admirable
dissimulation, pleaded. Moreover, it is possible that the Genoese was one of
those shrewd persons who know nothing but what they should know, and believe
nothing but what they should believe.</p>
<p>In this state of mutual understanding, they reached Leghorn. Here Edmond was to
undergo another trial; he was to find out whether he could recognize himself,
as he had not seen his own face for fourteen years. He had preserved a
tolerably good remembrance of what the youth had been, and was now to find out
what the man had become. His comrades believed that his vow was fulfilled. As
he had twenty times touched at Leghorn, he remembered a barber in St. Ferdinand
Street; he went there to have his beard and hair cut. The barber gazed in
amazement at this man with the long, thick and black hair and beard, which gave
his head the appearance of one of Titian’s portraits. At this period it
was not the fashion to wear so large a beard and hair so long; now a barber
would only be surprised if a man gifted with such advantages should consent
voluntarily to deprive himself of them. The Leghorn barber said nothing and
went to work.</p>
<p>When the operation was concluded, and Edmond felt that his chin was completely
smooth, and his hair reduced to its usual length, he asked for a looking-glass.
He was now, as we have said, three-and-thirty years of age, and his fourteen
years’ imprisonment had produced a great transformation in his
appearance.</p>
<p>Dantès had entered the Château d’If with the round, open, smiling face of
a young and happy man, with whom the early paths of life have been smooth, and
who anticipates a future corresponding with his past. This was now all changed.
The oval face was lengthened, his smiling mouth had assumed the firm and marked
lines which betoken resolution; his eyebrows were arched beneath a brow
furrowed with thought; his eyes were full of melancholy, and from their depths
occasionally sparkled gloomy fires of misanthropy and hatred; his complexion,
so long kept from the sun, had now that pale color which produces, when the
features are encircled with black hair, the aristocratic beauty of the man of
the north; the profound learning he had acquired had besides diffused over his
features a refined intellectual expression; and he had also acquired, being
naturally of a goodly stature, that vigor which a frame possesses which has so
long concentrated all its force within itself.</p>
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<p>To the elegance of a nervous and slight form had succeeded the solidity of a
rounded and muscular figure. As to his voice, prayers, sobs, and imprecations
had changed it so that at times it was of a singularly penetrating sweetness,
and at others rough and almost hoarse.</p>
<p>Moreover, from being so long in twilight or darkness, his eyes had acquired the
faculty of distinguishing objects in the night, common to the hyena and the
wolf. Edmond smiled when he beheld himself; it was impossible that his best
friend—if, indeed, he had any friend left—could recognize him; he
could not recognize himself.</p>
<p>The master of <i>La Jeune Amélie</i>, who was very desirous of retaining
amongst his crew a man of Edmond’s value, had offered to advance him
funds out of his future profits, which Edmond had accepted. His next care on
leaving the barber’s who had achieved his first metamorphosis was to
enter a shop and buy a complete sailor’s suit—a garb, as we all
know, very simple, and consisting of white trousers, a striped shirt, and a
cap.</p>
<p>It was in this costume, and bringing back to Jacopo the shirt and trousers he
had lent him, that Edmond reappeared before the captain of the lugger, who had
made him tell his story over and over again before he could believe him, or
recognize in the neat and trim sailor the man with thick and matted beard, hair
tangled with seaweed, and body soaking in seabrine, whom he had picked up naked
and nearly drowned. Attracted by his prepossessing appearance, he renewed his
offers of an engagement to Dantès; but Dantès, who had his own projects, would
not agree for a longer time than three months.</p>
<p><i>La Jeune Amélie</i> had a very active crew, very obedient to their captain,
who lost as little time as possible. He had scarcely been a week at Leghorn
before the hold of his vessel was filled with printed muslins, contraband
cottons, English powder, and tobacco on which the excise had forgotten to put
its mark. The master was to get all this out of Leghorn free of duties, and
land it on the shores of Corsica, where certain speculators undertook to
forward the cargo to France.</p>
<p>They sailed; Edmond was again cleaving the azure sea which had been the first
horizon of his youth, and which he had so often dreamed of in prison. He left
Gorgone on his right and La Pianosa on his left, and went towards the country
of Paoli and Napoleon.</p>
<p>The next morning going on deck, as he always did at an early hour, the patron
found Dantès leaning against the bulwarks gazing with intense earnestness at a
pile of granite rocks, which the rising sun tinged with rosy light. It was the
Island of Monte Cristo.</p>
<p><i>La Jeune Amélie</i> left it three-quarters of a league to the larboard and
kept on for Corsica. Dantès thought, as they passed so closely to the island
whose name was so interesting to him, that he had only to leap into the sea and
in half an hour be at the promised land. But then what could he do without
instruments to discover his treasure, without arms to defend himself? Besides,
what would the sailors say? What would the patron think? He must wait.</p>
<p>Fortunately, Dantès had learned how to wait; he had waited fourteen years for
his liberty, and now he was free he could wait at least six months or a year
for wealth. Would he not have accepted liberty without riches if it had been
offered to him? Besides, were not those riches chimerical?—offspring of
the brain of the poor Abbé Faria, had they not died with him? It is true, the
letter of the Cardinal Spada was singularly circumstantial, and Dantès repeated
it to himself, from one end to the other, for he had not forgotten a word.</p>
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<p>Evening came, and Edmond saw the island tinged with the shades of twilight, and
then disappear in the darkness from all eyes but his own, for he, with vision
accustomed to the gloom of a prison, continued to behold it last of all, for he
remained alone upon deck. The next morn broke off the coast of Aleria; all day
they coasted, and in the evening saw fires lighted on land; the position of
these was no doubt a signal for landing, for a ship’s lantern was hung up
at the mast-head instead of the streamer, and they came to within a gunshot of
the shore. Dantès noticed that the captain of <i>La Jeune Amélie</i> had, as he
neared the land, mounted two small culverins, which, without making much noise,
can throw a four ounce ball a thousand paces or so.</p>
<p>But on this occasion the precaution was superfluous, and everything proceeded
with the utmost smoothness and politeness. Four shallops came off with very
little noise alongside the lugger, which, no doubt, in acknowledgement of the
compliment, lowered her own shallop into the sea, and the five boats worked so
well that by two o’clock in the morning all the cargo was out of <i>La
Jeune Amélie</i> and on <i>terra firma</i>. The same night, such a man of
regularity was the patron of <i>La Jeune Amélie</i>, the profits were divided,
and each man had a hundred Tuscan livres, or about eighty francs.</p>
<p>But the voyage was not ended. They turned the bowsprit towards Sardinia, where
they intended to take in a cargo, which was to replace what had been
discharged. The second operation was as successful as the first, <i>La Jeune
Amélie</i> was in luck. This new cargo was destined for the coast of the Duchy
of Lucca, and consisted almost entirely of Havana cigars, sherry, and Malaga
wines.</p>
<p>There they had a bit of a skirmish in getting rid of the duties; the excise
was, in truth, the everlasting enemy of the patron of <i>La Jeune Amélie</i>. A
customs officer was laid low, and two sailors wounded; Dantès was one of the
latter, a ball having touched him in the left shoulder. Dantès was almost glad
of this affray, and almost pleased at being wounded, for they were rude lessons
which taught him with what eye he could view danger, and with what endurance he
could bear suffering. He had contemplated danger with a smile, and when wounded
had exclaimed with the great philosopher, “Pain, thou art not an
evil.”</p>
<p>He had, moreover, looked upon the customs officer wounded to death, and,
whether from heat of blood produced by the encounter, or the chill of human
sentiment, this sight had made but slight impression upon him. Dantès was on
the way he desired to follow, and was moving towards the end he wished to
achieve; his heart was in a fair way of petrifying in his bosom. Jacopo, seeing
him fall, had believed him killed, and rushing towards him raised him up, and
then attended to him with all the kindness of a devoted comrade.</p>
<p>This world was not then so good as Doctor Pangloss believed it, neither was it
so wicked as Dantès thought it, since this man, who had nothing to expect from
his comrade but the inheritance of his share of the prize-money, manifested so
much sorrow when he saw him fall. Fortunately, as we have said, Edmond was only
wounded, and with certain herbs gathered at certain seasons, and sold to the
smugglers by the old Sardinian women, the wound soon closed. Edmond then
resolved to try Jacopo, and offered him in return for his attention a share of
his prize-money, but Jacopo refused it indignantly.</p>
<p>As a result of the sympathetic devotion which Jacopo had from the first
bestowed on Edmond, the latter was moved to a certain degree of affection. But
this sufficed for Jacopo, who instinctively felt that Edmond had a right to
superiority of position—a superiority which Edmond had concealed from all
others. And from this time the kindness which Edmond showed him was enough for
the brave seaman.</p>
<p>Then in the long days on board ship, when the vessel, gliding on with security
over the azure sea, required no care but the hand of the helmsman, thanks to
the favorable winds that swelled her sails, Edmond, with a chart in his hand,
became the instructor of Jacopo, as the poor Abbé Faria had been his tutor. He
pointed out to him the bearings of the coast, explained to him the variations
of the compass, and taught him to read in that vast book opened over our heads
which they call heaven, and where God writes in azure with letters of diamonds.</p>
<p>And when Jacopo inquired of him, “What is the use of teaching all these
things to a poor sailor like me?” Edmond replied, “Who knows? You
may one day be the captain of a vessel. Your fellow-countryman, Bonaparte,
became emperor.” We had forgotten to say that Jacopo was a Corsican.</p>
<p>Two months and a half elapsed in these trips, and Edmond had become as skilful
a coaster as he had been a hardy seaman; he had formed an acquaintance with all
the smugglers on the coast, and learned all the Masonic signs by which these
half pirates recognize each other. He had passed and re-passed his Island of
Monte Cristo twenty times, but not once had he found an opportunity of landing
there.</p>
<p>He then formed a resolution. As soon as his engagement with the patron of <i>La
Jeune Amélie</i> ended, he would hire a small vessel on his own
account—for in his several voyages he had amassed a hundred
piastres—and under some pretext land at the Island of Monte Cristo. Then
he would be free to make his researches, not perhaps entirely at liberty, for
he would be doubtless watched by those who accompanied him. But in this world
we must risk something. Prison had made Edmond prudent, and he was desirous of
running no risk whatever. But in vain did he rack his imagination; fertile as
it was, he could not devise any plan for reaching the island without
companionship.</p>
<p>Dantès was tossed about on these doubts and wishes, when the patron, who had
great confidence in him, and was very desirous of retaining him in his service,
took him by the arm one evening and led him to a tavern on the Via del’
Oglio, where the leading smugglers of Leghorn used to congregate and discuss
affairs connected with their trade. Already Dantès had visited this maritime
Bourse two or three times, and seeing all these hardy free-traders, who
supplied the whole coast for nearly two hundred leagues in extent, he had asked
himself what power might not that man attain who should give the impulse of his
will to all these contrary and diverging minds. This time it was a great matter
that was under discussion, connected with a vessel laden with Turkey carpets,
stuffs of the Levant, and cashmeres. It was necessary to find some neutral
ground on which an exchange could be made, and then to try and land these goods
on the coast of France. If the venture was successful the profit would be
enormous, there would be a gain of fifty or sixty piastres each for the crew.</p>
<p>The patron of <i>La Jeune Amélie</i> proposed as a place of landing the Island
of Monte Cristo, which being completely deserted, and having neither soldiers
nor revenue officers, seemed to have been placed in the midst of the ocean
since the time of the heathen Olympus by Mercury, the god of merchants and
robbers, classes of mankind which we in modern times have separated if not made
distinct, but which antiquity appears to have included in the same category.</p>
<p>At the mention of Monte Cristo Dantès started with joy; he rose to conceal his
emotion, and took a turn around the smoky tavern, where all the languages of
the known world were jumbled in a <i>lingua franca</i>.</p>
<p>When he again joined the two persons who had been discussing the matter, it had
been decided that they should touch at Monte Cristo and set out on the
following night. Edmond, being consulted, was of opinion that the island
afforded every possible security, and that great enterprises to be well done
should be done quickly.</p>
<p>Nothing then was altered in the plan, and orders were given to get under weigh
next night, and, wind and weather permitting, to make the neutral island by the
following day.</p>
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