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1001 Adventure and Mystery Stories For The Road

CLASSIC ADVENTURE: THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO (CHAPS 115-116) LUIGI VAMPA'S BILL OF FARE and THE PARDON

1001 Adventure and Mystery Stories For The Road

Jon Hagadorn

Arts, Fiction

4.7520 Ratings

🗓️ 14 January 2026

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

CHAP 115 SUMMARY

Peppino, the jailor in the catacombs, announces to Danglars the next day that, if the banker would like to eat, he must pay 100,000 francs for a chicken, or 100,000 francs for a loaf of bread. Peppino says he knows that Danglars is carrying over 5 million francs worth of banknotes on his person, and so he asks that, for each individual item, Danglars pay out 100,000 francs so that he might survive. Danglars realizes this is how his ransom is to be meted out, and he does in fact pay 100,000 francs for a chicken, which he considers rather "thin" as he eats it angrily in the cave.
This is a small, humorous episode in Danglars capture, allowing Vampa, Peppino, and their men to slowly peel away Danglars' money. It should be noted that this money has effectively been stolen from Boville, who was to use it for charitable ends. Thus, though Vampa is stealing it for himself, he is at least stealing from a thief, one who is doing all he can to maintain his social standing in the face of public shaming.

 

CHAP 116 SUMMARY

 
Danglars continues bargaining his money, thousands by thousands, so that he might eat in the prison for five days. The Count of Monte Cristo finally appears with Vampa when Danglars is down to his last 50,000 francs, and the Count says that he is now pardoning Danglars—and that Villefort and Fernand were not so lucky, as the first is now mad with grief, and the second is dead by suicide. The Count announces that he is actually Edmond Dantes, and that Danglars' utter financial ruin is for the sake of punishment, but the Count allows Danglars to start his life anew somewhere else upon release by Vampa. He also states that the 5 million francs "paid out" to the bandits have been given to the hospice account of Boville, from which Danglars first drew them under criminal circumstances in Rome.
  This shows that, though he could exact even more damning revenge on Danglars by killing him, the Count has chosen not to – he has placed a limit on his desire for vengeance.

 

 

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back, everyone, 1001 Stories for the Road.

0:27.1

This is your host and storyteller, John Haggardorn.

0:30.8

As we continue with the Count of Monte Cristo.

0:34.2

Today, chapters 115 and 116.

0:39.4

And now, chapter 115, Luigi Vampa's Bill Affair.

0:45.5

We awake from every sleep except the one dreaded by danglers.

0:50.6

He awoke.

0:52.4

To a Parisian accustomed to silken curtains, walls hung with velvet drapery, and the soft perfume of burning wood, the white smoke of which diffuses itself in graceful curves around the room.

1:04.0

The appearance of the whitewashed cell which greeted his eyes on awakening seemed like the continuation of some disagreeable dream.

1:12.3

But in such a situation, a single moment suffices to change the strongest doubt into certainty.

1:18.7

Yes, yes, he murmured.

1:21.2

I am in the hands of the brigands of whom Albert de Morsef spoke.

1:26.1

His first idea was to breathe that he might know whether he was wounded.

1:30.7

He borrowed this from Don Quixote, the only book he'd ever read, but which he still

1:35.8

lightly remembered.

1:38.8

No, he cried, they have not wounded, but perhaps they have robbed me, and he thrust his hands into his

1:45.9

pockets. They were untouched. The hundred louis he had reserved for his journey from Rome to Venice

1:52.1

were in his trousers pocket, and in that of his great coat he found the little note-case

1:57.0

containing the letter of credit for five million and fifty thousand francs.

2:06.6

Singular bandits, he exclaimed, they have left me my purse and pocketbook.

2:10.6

As I was saying last night, they intend me to be ransomed.

2:15.7

Hello, here is my watch. Let me see what time it is.

...

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