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LUYỆN ĐỌC ANH NGỮ QUA CÁC TÁC PHẨM VĂN HỌC-THE THREE MUSKERTEERS ALEXANDRE DUMAS CHAPTER 7

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THE THREE MUSKERTEERS ALEXANDRE DUMAS CHAPTER 7 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 THREE MUSKERTEERS ALEXANDRE DUMAS CHAPTER 7 When D Artagnan was out of the Louvre and consulted his friends upon the use he had best make of his share of the forty pistoles Athos advised him to order a good repast at the Pomme-de-Pin Porthos to engage a lackey and Aramis to provide himself with a suitable mistress. The repast was carried into effect that very day and the lackey waited at table. The repast had been ordered by Athos and the lackey furnished by Porthos. He was a Picard whom the glorious Musketeer had picked up on the Bridge Tournelle making rings and plashing in the water. Porthos pretended that this occupation was proof of a reflective and contemplative organization and he had brought him this gentleman for whom he believed himself to be engaged had won Planchet--that was the name of the Picard. He felt a slight disappointment however when he saw that this place was already taken by a compeer named Mousqueton and when Porthos signified to him that the state of his household though great would not support two servants and that he must enter into the service of D Artagnan. Nevertheless when he waited at the dinner given by his master and saw him take out a handful of gold to pay for it he believed his fortune made and returned thanks to heaven for having thrown him into the service of such a Croesus. He preserved this opinion even after the feast with the remnants of which he repaired his own long abstinence but when in the evening he made his master s bed the chimeras of Planchet faded away. The bed was the only one in the apartment which consisted of an antechamber and a bedroom. Planchet slept in the antechamber upon a coverlet taken from the bed of D Artagnan and which D Artagnan from that time made shift to do without. Athos on his part had a valet whom he had trained in his service in a thoroughly peculiar fashion and who was named Grimaud. He was very taciturn this worthy signor. Be it understood we are speaking of Athos. During the five or