His boisterousness bites him in the ass once, when his temper allows a cardinal's agent to lure him into duel and Porthos gets run thorough with a sword before he can react. Makes sense, since his strength grows too. Boisterous Bruiser: Porthos, more and moreso as the books go on.The Big Guy: Porthos, whose size and strength seems to grow with each book.
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As the series wears on, he seems to get physically larger every time he's described, until by the final book, he's practically a giant. Big Fun: Porthos starts off as the rollicking, boozing, woman-chasing party animal of the Musketeers.Unfortunately, as he says himself when a soldier he feels a calling for the clergy and vice versa. Badass Bookworm: Aramis, despite being a thorough womanizer and elite soldier, is also an academic with a passion for the clergy.Of course, the novels were written when horses were the only form of personal transportation. Horses regularly keel over, get shot, and get ridden to death, with the careful planning of replacement horses at regularly-placed intervals being an integral part of any high-speed chase. In the second book he does it ironically, but after his FaceHeel Turn in the third, the hypocrisy is back. As the Good Book Says.: Aramis does this almost as a sort of Catchphrase, annoying his friends with his primly Holier Than Thou attitude.He served only Louis XIV as a musketeer (like he would in Le Vicomte de Bragelonne), not Louis XIII.
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The Ace: Athos is essentially the perfect gentleman.The trilogy as a whole provides examples of: