| Introduction | p. XV |
| Author's Preface: Wherein It Is Proved That Despite Their Names Ending in -os and -is, the Heroes of the Story We are About to Relate Have Nothing Mythological About Them | p. xix |
| The Three Gifts of Monsieur d'Artagnan the Elder | p. 3 |
| The Antechamber of Monsieur de Treville | p. 16 |
| The Audience | p. 26 |
| Of Athos and His Shoulder, of Porthos and His Baldric, and of Aramis and His Handkerchief | p. 36 |
| His Majesty's Musketeers and the Cardinal's Guards | p. 43 |
| His Majesty King Louis XIII | p. 53 |
| Home Life of the Musketeers | p. 69 |
| Concerning a Court Intrigue | p. 76 |
| D'Artagnan to the Fore | p. 84 |
| Concerning a Mousetrap in the Seventeenth Century | p. 91 |
| In Which the Plot Thickens | p. 100 |
| George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham | p. 115 |
| Of Monsieur Bonacieux | p. 122 |
| The Man of Meung | p. 129 |
| Men of Law and Men of the Sword | p. 138 |
| Wherein Monsieur Pierre Seguier, Chancellor of France and Keeper of the Seals, Looks More Than Once for a Bell to Ring as Lustily as He Was Wont to Do of Yore | p. 145 |
| Of Monsieur Bonacieux and His Lady | p. 156 |
| Lover and Husband | p. 167 |
| Plan of Campaign | p. 173 |
| The Journey | p. 181 |
| Lady Clark | p. 191 |
| In Which Their Majesties Dance La Merlaison, a Favorite Ballet of the King's | p. 199 |
| The Rendezvous | p. 206 |
| The Lodge | p. 216 |
| Of What Happened to Porthos | p. 225 |
| Of Aramis and His Thesis | p. 243 |
| Of Athos and His Wife | p. 259 |
| The Return | p. 278 |
| Of the Hunt for Campaign Outfits | p. 292 |
| Milady | p. 300 |
| Englishmen and Frenchmen | p. 307 |
| A Dinner at the House of an Attorney-at-Law | p. 313 |
| The Soubrette and Her Mistress | p. 321 |
| Concerning the Respective Outfits of Aramis and Porthos | p. 331 |
| At Night All Cats Are Gray | p. 338 |
| Dreams of Vengeance | p. 345 |
| Of Milady's Secret | p. 352 |
| How Athos Without Lifting a Finger Procured His Equipment for the Campaign | p. 358 |
| A Vision | p. 366 |
| Wherein D'Artagnan Meets His Eminence and Milady Speeds Him Off to War | p. 374 |
| The Siege of La Rochelle | p. 381 |
| Of Anjou Wine and Its Salubrious Virtues | p. 392 |
| At the Sign of the Red Dovecote | p. 399 |
| Of the Utility of Stovepipes | p. 406 |
| Husband and Wife | p. 413 |
| The Bastion Saint-Gervais | p. 418 |
| The Council of the Musketeers | p. 424 |
| A Family Affair | p. 440 |
| Fatality | p. 453 |
| Of an Intimate Conversation Between Brother and Sister | p. 460 |
| Of an Officer Out on a Stroll | p. 466 |
| Captivity: The First Day | p. 475 |
| Captivity: The Second Day | p. 481 |
| Captivity: The Third Day | p. 487 |
| Captivity: The Fourth Day | p. 495 |
| Captivity: The Fifth Day | p. 502 |
| How Milady Employed the Technique of Classical Tragedy to Prepare a Modern One | p. 515 |
| Escape | p. 521 |
| Of What Occurred at Portsmouth on August 23, 1628 | p. 528 |
| Of What Was Happening in France | p. 538 |
| Of What Occurred at the Convent of the Carmelite Nuns in Bethune | p. 543 |
| Of Two Varieties of Demons | p. 555 |
| Of Wine and Water | p. 561 |
| The Man in the Red Cloak | p. 573 |
| Day of Judgment | p. 577 |
| Of How Judgment Was Accomplished | p. 585 |
| Of the Cardinal, His Agent and a Lieutenant's Commission | p. 589 |
| Epilogue | p. 597 |
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