THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO (CHAPS 93-94)
1001 Adventure and Mystery Stories For The Road
Jon Hagadorn
4.7 • 520 Ratings
🗓️ 7 December 2025
⏱️ 46 minutes
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Summary
CHAP 93 VALENTINE Maximilien Morrel, fresh from the aborted duel, goes to visit Valentine at the Villefort home, where she announces that she has decided that finally she and Noirtier will move out together into their own quarters. Mme Danglars and Eugenie visit Mme de Villefort to announce that Eugenie will be marrying Andrea Cavalcanti, and though Eugenie says she does not wish to marry at all, she says it is at least better that she marry Andrea than a man disgraced.
This is another instance of dramatic irony, for the reader understands that Andrea himself is an imposter, and as previous events in the novel have indicated, it seems only a matter of time until Andrea's past is also brought to light. Eugenie is a fascinating character, one who attempts to make her own life in a society where this kind of independence for women is rarely possible.
Valentine has been feeling faint and unwell, and she tells Maximilien that Noirtier has prescribed to her the same potion that he drinks in large quantities, as a medicine for his own condition. This same potion is what the doctor formerly described as a poison which, in preparatory doses, can be used actually to prevent poisoning, if one builds up resistance to it slowly. Coming to pay respects to the Danglars, Valentine excuses herself, falls ill again, and collapses in another room near Noirtier and Morrel, who immediately call for help.
For many chapters the groundwork has seemingly been laid for Valentine's poisoning. Although it has not been stated explicitly that Mme de Villefort is the poisoner, it always seemed unlikely that Valentine was the culprit. Now that Valentine has fallen ill, this gives even more credence to the idea that it is Mme de Villefort who is to blame. The question now is the emergency of Valentine's condition, and whether she will be able to survive this sickness.\
CHAP 94 MAXIMILIAN'S RENEWAL
Villefort calls on the doctor who had warned him about the poisoning in his family, and after hearing that it is Valentine who has now fallen ill—Valentine whom the doctor initially suspected of the crime—he agrees to help Villefort in finding the true criminal. The doctor arrives at the Villefort home and questions Noirtier, who admits in his sign-language to having prepared Valentine by administering to her protective doses of brucine, the poison, in order to inoculate her against possible attack. The doctor thanks Noirtier for saving Valentine's life.
The doctor discovers practice the method that, long ago, the Count discussed with Mme de Villefort. Noirtier, in his wisdom, saw that Valentine was going to be a target of poisoning in the home, and so he used a small amount of poison to build up Valentine's tolerance, allowing her to suffer larger doses without immediately succumbing to them. The doctor recognizes how clever and compassionate Noirtier's care for Valentine has been.
In parallel, Maximilien runs to the house of the Count, begging him for help, since there is a murderer in the Villefort house. Morrel finally admits to the Count that he is in love with and wishes to marry Valentine. As devoted as the Count is to Morrel, this harms his plan, for the Count has sworn vengeance against Villefort and calls Valentine the child of a "dangerous breed." At this, however, the Count says he will ponder what best to do. After the doctor has finished checking up on Valentine and realizes that she will survive this poisoning attack, the narrator relates that the Abbe Busoni has purchased the house next to the Villeforts, the house whose garden Morrel has tended as a way of courting Valentine.
This is another complication to the Count's plan. The Count wants to elevate Young Morrel, to name him as his son and heir, as indicated in previous chapters. But if Maximilien is joined to the Villefort family, the Count finds himself in a conundrum, for he wants to destroy the Villeforts. With this said, however, the episode with Albert and Mercedes has helped him to separate the innocent from the guilty, even within a family. Thus, after much thought, he seems open to the possibility that he can disentangle helping Valentine from harming Villefort.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome back, everyone, 1001 Stories for the Road. |
| 0:27.2 | This is your host and storyteller, John Haggardorn. |
| 0:30.4 | Today, chapters 93 and 94, from the Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandra Dumas. |
| 0:38.2 | Now, chapter 93. Valentine. |
| 0:42.9 | We may easily conceive where Morel's appointment was. |
| 0:46.8 | On leaving Monte Cristo, he walked slowly towards Villaforps. |
| 0:50.8 | We say slowly, for Morel had more than half an hour to spare to go 500 steps, |
| 0:56.8 | but he had hastened to take leave of Monte Cristo because he wished to be alone with his thoughts. |
| 1:02.0 | He knew his time well, the hour when Valentine was giving Nortier his breakfast, |
| 1:07.3 | and was sure not to be disturbed in the performance of this pious duty. |
| 1:12.6 | Nortier and Valentine had given him leave to go twice a week, and he was now availing himself |
| 1:17.4 | of that permission. He had arrived. Valentine was expecting him. Uneasy and almost crazed, |
| 1:25.5 | she seized his hand and led him to her grandfather. |
| 1:28.8 | This uneasiness, amounting almost a frenzy, arose from the report Morserf's adventure |
| 1:35.2 | had made in the world, for the affair at the opera was generally known. |
| 1:40.0 | No one in Philoports doubted that a duel would ensue from it. |
| 1:44.3 | Valentine, with her woman's instinct, guessed that Morrell would be Monte Cristo's second, |
| 1:49.4 | and from the young man's well-known courage and his great affection for the Count, |
| 1:53.4 | she feared that he was not content himself with the passive part assigned to him. |
| 1:57.9 | We may easily understand how eagerly the particulars were asked for, given, and received, |
| 2:03.8 | and Morel could read an indescribable joy in the eyes of his beloved, when she knew that |
| 2:08.8 | the termination of this affair was as happy as it was unexpected. Now, said Valentine, |
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