Difference between revisions of "The Three Musketeers"
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''The Three Musketeers'' was a novel written by [[Dumas, Alexandre|Alexandre Dumas]]. When infected with [[polywater intoxication|an unknown disease]] on [[Stardate]] [[Chronology: 2266#1704|1704.2]], [[Starfleet Ranks#Lieutenant|Lieutenant]] [[Sulu, Hikaru|Sulu]] began chasing crewmembers with a [[foil]] and calling them [[Richelieu]], the antagonist of the book. After Sulu had been subdued, [[Starfleet Ranks#Lieutenant Commander|Lieutenant Commander]] [[Spock]] told the security crewmen to "take [[D'Artagnon]] here to sickbay," a reference to one of the eponymous Musketeers.<ref name="TOS06"/> | ''The Three Musketeers'' was a novel written by [[Dumas, Alexandre|Alexandre Dumas]]. When infected with [[polywater intoxication|an unknown disease]] on [[Stardate]] [[Chronology: 2266#1704|1704.2]], [[Starfleet Ranks#Lieutenant|Lieutenant]] [[Sulu, Hikaru|Sulu]] began chasing crewmembers with a [[foil]] and calling them [[Richelieu]], the antagonist of the book. After Sulu had been subdued, [[Starfleet Ranks#Lieutenant Commander|Lieutenant Commander]] [[Spock]] told the security crewmen to "take [[D'Artagnon]] here to sickbay," a reference to one of the eponymous Musketeers.<ref name="TOS06"/> | ||
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Revision as of 23:07, 6 January 2022
The Three Musketeers was a novel written by Alexandre Dumas. When infected with an unknown disease on Stardate 1704.2, Lieutenant Sulu began chasing crewmembers with a foil and calling them Richelieu, the antagonist of the book. After Sulu had been subdued, Lieutenant Commander Spock told the security crewmen to "take D'Artagnon here to sickbay," a reference to one of the eponymous Musketeers.[1]
Notes and References
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Man Trap". Star Trek, season 1, episode 1 (Production number 06). Directed by Marc Daniels. Written by George Clayton Johnson. Desilu Productions. 8 September 1966.