Page:The Count of Monte-Cristo (1887 Volume 1).djvu/295

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THE COUNT OF MONTE-CRISTO
275

have respected these signs, traced with a certain regularity, and probably with the design of leaving traces. Occasionally these marks disappeared beneath tufts of myrtle, which spread into large bushes laden with blossoms, or beneath parasitical lichen. It was thus requisite that

Dantès on the Isle of Monte-Cristo.

Edmond should push the branches on one side or remove the mosses in order to retrace the indicating marks which were to be his guides in this labyrinth. These signs had renewed the best hopes in Edmond's mind. Why should it not have been the cardinal who had first traced