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  1. Constance showed her dislike for Porthos, Aramis and Athos for leading D'Artagnan astray and getting him arrested, unaware that the Musketeers had plotted this for a reason.

  2. After returning with no information of the captain's whereabouts, Aramis was forced to join in a fight against D'Artagnan, when he arrived in the Musketeer garrison, accusing Athos of the murder of his father.

  3. Summary. D'Artagnan arrives at the inn where he left the wounded Aramis, and discovers him and two churchmen discussing Aramis's religious thesis: Aramis has again decided to join the Church.

  4. While Porthos brags about his prowess with the ladies, Aramis actually has the prowess, but he keeps his mouth very closed about it. One of his ladies in particular is a very high-up noblewoman who was exiled for being too close to the Queen.

  5. Aramis is constantly torn between his life as a musketeer and his desire to join the church. Although the other members of the group are skeptical Aramis will ever leave the musketeers, he proves them wrong by becoming an abbé at the end of the novel. However, for much the story, Aramis is far from the perfect priest.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AramisAramis - Wikipedia

    In The Three Musketeers, it is revealed that he became a musketeer because of a woman and his arrogance; as a young man in training for the priesthood, he had the misfortune to be caught (innocently or not) reading to a young married woman and thrown out of her house.

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  8. Aramis upbraids d'Artagnan for his rudeness, and the two set a duel for two o'clock that day. D'Artagnan is overwhelmed, but has to be amused by his own silliness, particularly in mocking Porthos for his clothing.