He is buried in silence. Then, faintly, the world above stirs.
One year after the restoration of Louis XVIII, the machinery of empire creaks into motion—and far below it, Edmond Dantès hears life again. In this grim and theatrical chapter, Dumas introduces the prison inspector: a man performing a ritual of concern while admitting its pointlessness. As the inspector prepares to descend into the dungeons, we see the contrast between ceremony and suffering, between the government’s performance and Dantès’ reality.
Topics Covered:
•Dantès’ perception of sound and time returning
•The inspector as a symbol of bureaucratic farce
•Real historical references behind France’s island prisons
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