Though of questionable morality, Dantes' eventual desire to succeed in achieving revenge is instilled and made feasible by his mentor's guiding hand and by the hope which is introduces into him.
And it is only in Faria's death that his teachings begin to manifest as aspects of a real future, not for the impertinently youthful Dante's, now dead after year's of captivity, but for the inexorably patient and newly emergent Count of Monte Cristo. After an isolation from society, and in particular from those to whom he owed retribution, the Count returns to France with an iconoclastic knowledge of mathematics, science, philosophy and politics, all underscored by a stony and almost inhuman patiencee. In addition, he has the money with which to accomplish all of his aims in each of these disciplines. It is the steady precision and calculating patience which his mentor has given to him in order to re-establish order in a universe whose justice has been skewed since his framing. There is a constant irony to this impetus, as demonstrated above by Faria's proclaimed remorse over invoking the thirst for vengeance in his young apprentice and the Count's subsequent indulgence in all his fantasies of revenge on the wealth of knowledge and material which he inherited from the objecting old man. This is representative of the general duality in Faria's philosophical disposition, a sense which he imparts upon the Count before his passing, imbuing a dark mission with a sense of unwavering hope for justice.
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Fernand demonstrates that hope can be an engine fueling acts of wanton and selfish cruelty as well. Ironically, this would also become a significant dimension of the hope harbored by the Dantes himself. While there was a portion of his imprisonment in which the hope of young Dantes helped to sustain him with notions of escape and freedom, he still remained frustratingly uncertain about the factors which placed him
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