What does the metaphor of the Three Musketeers mean?

Three musketeers (Dumas' novel) refers to three musketeers (Dumas' novel) and three musketeers, and is also translated into three musketeers and Chivalrous Hidden Book, which is one of the representative works of Dumas, a French romantic writer in the19th century. This book has been made into a movie five times. The protagonist of the story is D 'Artagnan, and three musketeers is Ado, Bordeaux and aramis.

This historical novel is based on the historical facts of the first 13 dynasty of French King Louis and the powerful ruling and opposition figure Cardinal Li Sailiu in power. It describes how three musketeers, Ados, Bordeaux, Aramais and their friend D 'Artagnan were loyal to the king and fought against Li Sailiu, thus reflecting the intrigue within the ruling class.

The influence of the work

The main literary achievement of three musketeers lies in its creation of a series of flesh-and-blood characters. D 'Artagnan's wit and courage, his love for friends, atos's wit and hatred for evil, Potous's rudeness and vanity, and aramis's elegant and flexible behavior.

Meredith's young beauty, ruthlessness, unfathomable cardinal, sinister and treacherous, Mrs. Bonaire's innocence and kindness, and her husband's silly and ridiculous personality are all vividly displayed on paper, which has high aesthetic value. It showed people the magnificent picture of French society at that time.