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    The Hunchback Of Notre-Dame

    - Victor Hugo

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    SUBMITTED TO

    MISS.ANJALI DHOLAKIYA

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    AcknowledgementI OWE A GREAT MANY THANKS TO A GREAT MANY PEOPLE WHO HELPED

    AND SUPPORTED ME DURING THE WRITING OF THIS BOOK.

    . I WISH TO RECORD A DEEP SENSE OF RESPECT AND GRATITUDE WOULD LIKE

    TO THANK MY PROJECT GUIDE, MISS.ANJALI DHOLAKIYA FOR HER

    ENCOURAGEMENT TO COURSE OF MY WORK. IT IS DUE TO THE ENDURING

    EFFORT AND GUIDANCE OF MY GUIDE THAT ULTIMATELY MADE IT SUCCESS. I

    ALSO TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO EXPRESS MY DEEP REGARDS AND WOULD

    LIKE TO THANK OUR HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT PROF.CHANDAK WHO GAVE

    US GUIDANCE TO TAKE UP AND PURSUE THE PROJECT.

    I ACKNOWLEDGE MY INDEBTNESS TO VARIOUS AUTHORS FOR MAKING USE OF

    VALUABLE INFORMATION LIBERALLY. MY HEARTFELT THANKS TO ALL THOSE

    FOR PROVIDING ME WITH THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE PROJECT AND ALSO

    TO THE ENTIRE FACULTY OF KISHINCHAND CHELLARAM COLLEGE, WHO

    HAVE PROVIDED ME WITH THE KNOWLEDGE WHICH HAS CONTRIBUTED

    IMMENSELY IN THE PREPARATION OF THIS PROJECT.

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    INTRODUCTIONVictor-Marie Hugo (26 February 180222 May 1885) was a French poet, playwright, novelist, essayist, visual

    artist, statesman, human rights activist and exponent of the Romantic movement in France. Hugo was born on

    February 26, 1802. His father, General Joseph Leopold Hugo, was the son of a carpenter who rose

    through the ranks of Napoleon's citizen army. However, Victor's mother decided not to subject her three

    sons to the difficulties of army life, and settled in Paris to raise them. Madame Hugo became the mistress

    of her husband's commanding officer, General Lahorie, who was a father figure to Hugo and his brothers

    until the General's execution in 1812.

    Victor was an excellent student who excelled in mathematics, physics, philosophy, French literature,

    Latin, and Greek. He won first place in a national poetry contest when he was 17.

    As a teenager, he fell in love with a neighbor's daughter, Adele Foucher. However, his mother

    discouraged the romance, believing that her son should marry into a finer family. When his mother died

    in 1821, Victor refused to accept financial help from his father. He lived in abject poverty for a year, but

    then won a pension of 1,000 francs a year from Louis XVIII for his first volume of verse. Barely out of

    his teens, Hugo became a hero to the common people as well as a favorite of heads of state. Throughout

    his lifetime, he played a major role in France's political evolution from dictatorship to democracy.

    In 1822, he married Adele Foucher, who became the mother of his children, Leopold-Victor, Charles-

    Victor, Francois-Victor, Adele, and Leopoldine.

    In 1830, Victor became one of the leaders of a group of Romantic rebels who were trying to loosen the

    hold of classical literature in France. His play Hernani, whose premiere was interrupted by fist-fights

    between Hugo's admirers and detractors, took a large step towards a more realistic theatre and made him a

    rich man.

    During the next 15 years he produced six plays, four volumes of verse, and the romantic historical novel

    The Hunchback of Notre Dame, establishing his reputation as the greatest writer in France.

    In 1831, Adele Hugo became romantically involved with a well known critic and good friend of Victor's

    named Sainte-Beuve. Victor became involved with the actress Juliette Drouet, who became his mistress in

    1833. Supported by a small pension from Hugo, Drouet became his unpaid secretary and traveling

    companion for the next fifty years.

    After losing one of his daughters in a drowning accident and experiencing the failure of his play Les

    Burgraves in 1843, Hugo decided to focus on the growing social problems in France. He was joined in his

    increasing interest in politics by a number of other Romantic writers, marking the beginning of theRealistic-Naturalistic era in French literature.

    Hugo was a moderate republican who was made a Peer of France in 1845. After the Revolution of 1848

    and the founding of the Second Republic, he was elected a deputy to the Constitutional Assembly. Three

    years later, when Louis Napoleon abolished the Republic and reestablished the Empire, Hugo risked

    execution trying to rally the workers of Paris against the new Emperor. However, his efforts failed, and he

    had to escape to Brussels.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_peoplehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_artisthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_artisthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statesmanhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rightshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanticismhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanticismhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rightshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statesmanhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_artisthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_artisthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_people
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    As a result, Hugo spent the next decade in exile with his family and Mme. Drouet on the islands of Jersey

    and Guernsey. During these years, he wrote satires about Louis Napoleon, returned to his poetry and

    published several novels including Les Misrables, which he had begun years earlier.

    When Les Misrables was published in Brussels in 1862, it was an immediate popular success in spite of

    negative reaction by critics, who considered it overly sentimental, and the government, who banned it.

    After the Franco-Prussian War and the fall of the Empire in 1870, Hugo made a triumphant return to

    Paris. He remained there through the siege of the city and contributed portions of his royalties to purchase

    weapons. He lost two sons, one in 1871 and one in 1873. Although he was elected to the Senate in 1876,

    poor health caused him to return to Guernsey. Mme. Hugo died in 1868 and Mme. Drouet in 1882.

    Hugo died in 1885 at the age of eighty-three. Although he left instructions that his funeral be simple, over

    3 million spectators followed his cortege to the Pantheon, where he was buried amid France's great men.

    Hugo's death came at the end of a century of war, civil conflict, brutally repressed insurrections such as

    the student rebellion in Les Misrables, and social injustice. Because of his belief in the triumph of

    good over evil and his pleading for tolerance and non-violence, Victor Hugo was the herald ofthe new democratic spirit.

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    SUMMARYDuring the 1482 Festival of Fools in Paris, Quasimodo, the hunchback of Notre Dame, is elected

    the Pope of Fools for being the ugliest person in Paris. He is hoisted on a throne and paraded

    around Paris by the jeering mob. Pierre Gringoire, a struggling poet and philosopher, triesunsuccessfully to get the crowd to watch his play instead of the parade. Archdeacon Claude

    Frollo appears and stops the parade and orders Quasimodo back to Notre Dame with him.

    Looking for something to eat, Gringoire admires the graceful beauty of La Esmerelda, a gypsy

    street dancer, and decides to follow her home. After rounding a corner, she is suddenly attacked

    by Quasimodo and Frollo. Gringoire rushes to help her but is knocked out by Quasimodo as

    Frollo runs away. The King's Archers, led by Phoebus de Chateaupers arrive just in time and

    capture the hunchback. Later that night, a group of beggars and thieves are about to hang

    Gringoire when La Esmerelda comes forward and offers to save his life by "marrying" him for

    four years only.

    The next day, Quasimodo is put on trial and sentenced to two hours of torture in the Place

    de Grve. He suffers both the pain of being stretched and pulled apart as well as being publiclyhumiliated by the crowd of people, who hate him for his ugliness. He begs for water, but no one

    answers his pleas until La Esmerelda comes forth and brings him something to drink. Nearby, a

    recluse called Sister Gudule, screams at La Esmerelda for being a "gypsy child- thief" andblames her for her daughter's kidnapping fifteen years earlier. A few months later, La Esmerelda

    is dancing in front of Notre Dame and Phoebus calls her over to him. She has fallen in love with

    him and blushes when he asks her to meet him later that night. Frollo watches them from the top

    of Notre Dame and becomes insanely jealous of Phoebus. His obsessive lust for La Esmereldahas made him renounce God and study alchemy and black magic. In his secret cell at Notre

    Dame, he plans to trap La Esmerelda like a spider catching a fly with its web. Later that night hefollows Phoebus to his tryst with La Esmerelda and stabs Phoebus repeatedly. He escapes and La

    Esmerelda is captured by the King's guard.

    After being tortured at her trial, La Esmerelda falsely confesses to killing Phoebus and being a

    witch. She is sentenced to hang in the Place de Grve. Frollo visits her in jail and declares his

    love. He begs her to love him and show him some pity but she calls him a "goblin-monk" and amurderer, refusing to have anything to do with him. Before her execution, La Esmerelda is

    publicly humiliated in front of Notre Dame. Looking across the square, she suddenly sees

    Phoebus and calls out his name. He actually survived the murder attempt but doesn't want

    anyone to know that he was injured. He turns away from La Esmerelda and enters the house ofhis bride-to-be. Just then, Quasimodo swings down on a rope from Notre Dame and carries her

    back to the cathedral, crying out "Sanctuary!" He had fallen in love with her when she broughthim water and had been planning her escape all along.

    La Esmerelda is safe from execution just as long as she stays inside the cathedral. At first, she

    finds it hard to even look at Quasimodo, but they form an uneasy friendship. Even though he is

    deaf, he enjoys being around her when she sings. Meanwhile, a group of vagabonds resolves to

    save La Esmerelda after hearing that Parliament has ordered that she be removed from Notre

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    Dame. But when Quasimodo sees them attack the cathedral, he thinks they have come to kill La

    Esmerelda and he fends them off as best he can, killing a large number of them. Frollo has used

    the attack as a diversion to sneak La Esmerelda out of the cathedral. He offers her two choices:

    she can either say she loves him or be hanged. She demands to be executed and he leaves her

    with Sister Gudule. To their astonishment, they discover that they are mother and daughter.

    Gudule tries to protect La Esmerelda, but it is too late. Back at Notre Dame, Quasimodo goes to

    the top of the north tower to find her. Gazing off into the distance, he sees the figure of La

    Esmerelda in a white dress hanging from the scaffold. He bellows out in despair and grabs Frollo

    by the neck. Holding him up in the air, Quasimodo sighs with grief and then throws Frollo down

    to his death. Looking at La Esmerelda hanging off in the distance and Frollo's wrangled corpse

    down below, Quasimodo cries out: "There is everything I ever loved!" Quasimodo is never seen

    again. Years later when a gravedigger stumbles across La Esmerelda's remains, he finds the

    skeleton of a hunchback curled around her.

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    PLOT STRUCTUREIn the beginning, the novel is narrated in chronological order, with the story of Quasimodounfolding in a straightforward manner. As the book progresses, the plot becomes complicated by

    subplots and flashbacks. The many subplots serve to make the plot rich, complex, and multi-

    layered. The main plot revolves around the hunchback of Notre-Dame and the two people that heloves in life: Claude Frollo and La Esmeralda. The subplots revolve around Gringoire, Phoebus,

    Jehan, and Pacquette. Though the subplots cause many digressions in the narrative, they

    eventually contribute to and intertwine with the main plot.The main plot of the novel follows theclassic pattern of development. The first chapters are largely introductory. Notre- Dame, the

    main setting of the novel, is presented in detail. Quasimodo, Claude Frollo, La Esmeralda, and

    Gringoire are introduced, and their development begins. The conflict is also defined, as

    Quasimodo becomes the protagonist fighting against his ugliness and seeking a purpose in lifebeyond the ringing of the bells.

    The rising action of the novel really begins with the attempted kidnapping of La Esmeralda.Since Claude Frollo has become obsessed with the gypsy entertainer, he tries to capture her for

    his own and forces Quasimodo to help him. When their kidnapping attempt is spoiled by

    Gringoire, Frollo flees the scene, leaving the hunchback to be arrested and flogged for the crime.After his public punishment, La Esmeralda emerges from the crowd to give him a drink of water.

    Quasimodo falls instantly in love with this beautiful woman, for no one, other than Frollo, has

    ever been kind to him before.

    The love of both Quasimodo and Frollo for La Esmeralda complicate the plot of the novel. When

    the evil priest learns that the gypsy girl loves Phoebus, he goes to the Court of Miracles and stabs

    the Captain, leaving him for dead. When the police arrive, La Esmeralda is charged with thecrime and sentenced to death by hanging. When she is on the pillory, ready to be executed,

    Quasimodo snatches La Esmeralda away from death and takes her into Notre-Dame forsanctuary. Frollo is driven to madness by her presence in his church. One night he tries to forcehimself on her, but Quasimodo comes to her rescue.

    Frollo decides that if he cannot have La Esmeralda, no one will have her. As a result, hemanipulates Gringoire into helping with a plan to rescue the gypsy girl from Notre-Dame. After

    the two men kidnap her from her tower cell, the evil priest tells La Esmeralda that she must love

    him or face execution. La Esmeralda chooses death.

    The climax of the story occurs when Quasimodo discovers that he has lost La Esmeralda. Since

    she has been taken from her sanctuary in the cathedral, he is determined to punish the guilty

    party. The falling action revolves around the events of the next few hours, as both La Esmeraldaand Frollo meet their deaths. When Quasimodo sees his beloved gypsy being hanged on the

    pillory and hears Frollo let out a fiendish laugh, Quasimodo becomes a madman. He charges the

    priest, who has raised him and been his master, and pushes him off the balcony to his deathbelow. Quasimodo then realizes he is totally alone in the world.

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    In the conclusion to the novel, Hugo ties up all the loose ends of the plot. Gringoire becomes a

    successful writer; Phoebus marries Fleur de Lys; and Quasimodo grieves himself to death. Hedies clinging to the dead body of La Esmeralda.

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    CHARACTERIZATIONQuasimodo -

    The hunchback of Notre Dame. Quasimodo is an abandoned child left at Notre Dame and

    adopted by Archdeacon Claude Frollo. Hideously deformed, he has a giant humpback, a

    protrusion coming out of his chest, and a giant wart that covers one of his eyes. He is also deaf.

    His heart is pure, and this purity is linked to the cathedral itself. Indeed, his love for Notre

    Dame's bells and for the beautiful sound of their ringing represents his only form of

    communication. The whole of Paris ironically enjoys Quasimodo's singing while at the same

    time detesting him for ugliness. His name literally means "half-made."

    Archdeacon Claude Frollo -

    A priest at Notre Dame, Frollo is also the novel's antagonist. However, he is not a typical evil

    character bent on causing pain and suffering; instead, he is very bright and compassionate. He

    dearly loves his brother, Jehan and does everything in his power to make Jehan happy after theirparents die. He extends the same compassion to Quasimodo, who he tries to mold into a scholar

    just like his brother by teaching him how to read and write. Hugo explains Frollo's descent into

    black magic and madness through his failure to bring up both Jehan and Quasimodo. Jehandrinks and gambles all his money away, completely neglecting his studies, while Quasimodo's

    deafness makes it virtually impossible to teach him anything. The hunchback thus becomes botha symbol of failure for Frollo as well as a powerful tool of vengeance to wreak his frustrations

    out on the world. His obsessive lust for La Esmerelda causes her to be executed and Quasimodoto be tortured. No matter how hard he tries to make her love him, he only ends up causing her

    pain.

    La EsmereldaThe lost daughter of Sister Gudule, La Esmerelda is a beautiful gypsy street dancer. Along with

    her goat, Djali, she charms everyone she meets with her stunning looks and magic tricks. She

    keeps an amulet and other trinkets around her neck to help her find her parents.

    Pierre Gringoire -

    A struggling playwright and philosopher. La Esmerelda saves him from being hanged by a groupof vagabonds and agrees to "marry" him for four years. He later joins the vagabonds and

    unwittingly helps Frollo hand La Esmerelda over to the authorities.

    Phoebus de Chateaupers -

    The captain of the King's Archers, he saves La Esmerelda from Quasimodo. He does not loveher, but tries to seduce her and a number of other women as well. Frollo stabs him and everyone

    leaves him for dead. He recovers but fails to speak up when La Esmerelda is sentenced to deathfor his murder. He ends up marrying Fleur-de-Lys de Gondelaurier. His first name is Greek for

    "the sun."

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    Sister Gudule -

    La Esmerelda's long lost mother. She is a miserable recluse living in the Tour Roland, who hatesto hear the sound of children playing. She is convinced that gypsies ate her adoptive daughter,

    Agnes, fifteen years earlier. She hates La Esmerelda and is convinced that she is a child thief, but

    when she learns that she is actually her daughter, Gudule gives her life to save her.

    Jehan Frollo -

    Claude Frollo's brother. Jehan is a horrible student who gambles and drinks all his money away.He decides to join the vagabonds and Quasimodo kills him as he attacks Notre Dame.

    Clopin Trouillefou -Clopin disrupts Gringoire's play and later turns out to be not just a simple beggar, but "King" of

    the vagabonds. He tries to save La Esmerelda from being hanged but Quasimodo thinks that

    Clopin is trying to kill her.

    Louis XI -

    The King of France in 1482. Louis XI is a heartless monarch who lives in the Bastille instead ofthe Louvre. He pardons Gringoire for attacking Notre Dame but orders La Esmerelda's

    execution.

    Djali -

    La Esmerelda's goat. Djali can perform magic tricks and spell the name Phoebus out of a groupof letters. At La Esmerelda's trial Djali is accused of being possessed by the devil.

    Fleur-de-Lys de Gondelaurier -

    One of Phoebus's admirers, she later becomes his wife. She also humiliates La Esmerelda bymocking her clothes.

    Master Florian BarbedienneThe deaf judge who condemns Quasimodo to torture.

    Master Jacques Charmolue -One of Claude Frollo's associates. Jacques prosecutes and then tortures La Esmerelda to get her

    to confess to killing Phoebus. He later has her executed.

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    LANGUAGE:Language : English

    The Hunchback of Notre Dame ( French : Notre-Dame de Paris) is an 1831 French novel writtenby Victor Hugo. It is set in 1482 in Paris, in around the cathedral of Notre Dame de Pris.

    AUTHORS PERCEPTIVE:The book tells the story of a poor barefoot Gypsy girl (La Esmeralda) and a misshapen bell

    ringer ( Quasimodo) who was raised by the Archdeacon ( Claude Frollo).

    The book was written as a statement to preserve the Notre Dame cathedral and not to

    modernize it, as Hugo was thoroughly against this.

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    QUOTATION On the connection between architecture and culture: "When a man understands the art of

    seeing, he can trace the spirit of an age and the features of a king even in the knocker on a

    door."

    Quasimodo's reaction to Esmeralda's gift of a drink of water while he is being heckled on thepillory: "Then from that eye, hitherto so dry and burning, was seen to roll a big tear, which

    fell slowly down that deformed visage so long contracted by despair. Perhaps it was the first

    that the unfortunate creature had ever shed."

    Quasimodo, explaining why he won't enter Esmeralda's cell: "The owl goes not into the nestof the lark."

    After Esmeralda's execution: "Quasimodo then lifted his eye to look upon the Gypsy girl,whose body, suspended from the gibbet, he beheld quivering afar, under its white robes, inthe last struggles of death; then again he dropped it upon the archdeacon, stretched a

    shapeless mass at the foot of the tower, and he said with a sob that heaved his deep breast to

    the bottom, 'Oh, all that I've ever loved!'"

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibbethttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibbet
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    Readers Perceptive :The Hunchback of Notre-Dame by Victor Hugo is a great and marvelous classic book. Victor

    Hugo has great skill in developing characters, in this book no one is perfect just as human soul in

    the real world, lots of behavioral changes. It is full of emotion, love, betrayal, loyalty, death that

    will make you cry, smile, think and amazed at the end. Sad and tragic ending but beautiful

    AUDIENCE PERCEPTIVE: overly descriptive, good plot, many-sided characters The writing was amazing. Hugo really had a way of turning a phrase and expressing an

    idea. Sometimes I would just sit back and reflect on how well and creatively he put a

    thought together. He originally had entitled the book Notre Dame de Paris 1482 (or

    something similar), which would have been more appropriate. The book was about so

    much more than the hunchback. The book was dauntingly long. Long paragraphs with a

    lot of references to things that I know nothing about. The latter part was much easier to

    read. Appreciate it as a work of art.

    From my perceptive when reading the book, I can truly see the authors point in sayingthat the main charcter is the Cathedral. It is a work filled with rich history. I dont have

    the issues many have with detailed descriptions, so I know people will likely disagree

    with me when I say I love the way I can learn about the time, history and setting from this

    book through those detailed descriptions. Hugo may have been writing more volume for

    the sake of getting paid more, but I think he used words very well indeed.

    Hugo may have been writing more volume for the sake of getting paid more, but I think

    he used those words very well indeed.

    This is so much a redone work, that few would ever consider that it began life as ahistorical novel. Just like Les Miserables is historical so is this. It takes place in medieval

    times and it tells of a supposedly celibate priest who falls in love with a gypsy, as does

    everyone else in the novel, inclduding the ugly bellringing hunchback. She is the notorius

    lady of the title, Hugo's version of Mary Magdeline, a type he would return to in LesMiserables. She is a victim even though everyone...more

    Amazing book! Loved the author's view on things. I really felt like I was getting glimpsesof a great mind by reading this book. You might want to read it with a highlighter for

    good quotes. I'm reading Les Miserable right now and again I really like Victor Hugo's

    writing. There are times where he really goes into depth about history, or something and

    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30597.The_Hunchback_of_Notre_Damehttp://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30597.The_Hunchback_of_Notre_Damehttp://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30597.The_Hunchback_of_Notre_Dame
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    it is hard to read but if you can get past those parts you will thank yourself because he has

    some great writing.

    This is a beautiful novel of hope, prejudice, history, love, philosophy, and...architecture.In fact, the entire story centers not around the extraordinary main characters, but the

    cathedral itself (as is more evident in the original title, Notre Dame de Paris). As strange

    of a concept as it sounds, Hugo is able to pull it off with ease, creating the perfect

    atmosphere for such a novel.

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    VALIDITY OF THE TEXTThe book is somewhat tragic but is descriptive of how life often is for people and how we have to find

    beauty in the simple things with the people we have. I don't recommend it for everyone because not

    everyone understands the complexity of what Quasimodo represents even in our modern world, but

    for those who do understand the human spirit and its complexities then it stands above the rest in

    form, description, and beauty.

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    CONCLUSION:This book is an epic, and yet surprisingly quick read.. The characters all seem, and this is despite

    the many fantastical elements hinted at, very real. Claude Frollo is deeply flawed and at the same

    time incredibly bright, a slave to his lust for Esmeralda and the inescapable rational truth that he

    will be crushed by his obsession. Esmeralda herself is an interesting creation, exotic beauty on

    the outside, ignorant but well meaning child in her actions. But for me, the story rests on two sets

    of shoulders. One being Quasimodo, the only really pure character in the book scarred by his

    own birth and the ignorance of his age. And two, Hugos own narrative voice that creates a Paris

    so vividly described and realistically inhabited that the events described, as incredibly horrific or

    at times magnificent, seem plausible, or even real.

    He was Quasimodothe bell ringer of the Notre Dame. For most of his life he has been forced

    to live in lonely isolation in the bell tower of the famous cathedral hidden away like a beast,

    banished from sight, shunned and despised by all. For though he was gental and kind, it was

    Quasimodos crime to have been born hideously deformed. But one day his heart would prove to

    be a thing of rare beauty.

    She was the dazzling Esmerelda. A dark-eyed gypsy girl who, the victim of a cowards jealous

    rage, is unjustly convicted of a crime she did not commit. Her sentence is deadth by hanging.

    Only one man had the courage to save her : Quasimodo

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    BibliographyPRIMARY SOURCE

    NOVEL - THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE-DAME

    NAME OF THE AUTHORVICTOR HUGO

    SECONDARY SOURCE

    WWW.GOOGLE.COM

    WWW.VICTORHUGO.COM

    http://www.google.com/http://www.google.com/