Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Contrasting the Court of Miracles and Notre-Dame Essay -- comparison c

Contrasting the Court of Miracles and Notre-Dame   No peerless had yet remarked, in the gallery of royal statues..., a strange looking specter who until then had been find all that passed... All at once, at the moment that the chief executers two assistants were preparing to execute,... he strided up to the two sub-executioners, knocked them down, carried off the gipsy girl, and leapt at one move into the church, lifting the girl above his head and cried out in a formidable voice, Sanctuary   Notre-Dame, an intimidating edifice in the heart of fifteenth century Paris, bears many dissimilar faces for those residing in and near it. Quasimodo, the deformed bell ringer dwells in the church after being adopted by the archdeacon, Claude Frollo, when the hunchback was an infant. The empathetic monster lives in complete servitude to Frollo, his savior, and spends his days ringing his beloved bells which repay his altruism by causing him to go deaf. The highly adept archdeacon, Claude Frollo, also resides within the walls of Notre-Dame, and after weft his head with every piece of knowledge he can find, he begins to dedicate his life to alchemy.   The two men, besides their relationship and common habitat, have one other item in common. They both have fallen in love with La Esmeralda, a compassionate, orphaned gipsy girl who earns her living on the streets with her fluid dancing and droll tricks her goat, and best friend, Djali performs. Quasimodos love is pure and fresh and he lives in awe of La Esmeralda after she offers him a drink of water system when the townspeople deny him this request while he is being tortured as punishment for the sole crime of being deaf and not accord the judge. Frollos... ...ts walls are not as strong as the building. The archdeacon, Claude Frollo, a holy man, gives way to the sin of the flesh and tries to rape as well as cleanup La Esmeralda. Phoebus, a man who worships idol within its walls, single-handedly could sav e La Esmeraldas life, but chooses not to because of his own vanity. The entire town closes its eyes to the truth, and condemns an exculpatory girl to death without any proof, just for the fact that she is different from them.   The structures of the Court of Miracles and the Cathedral of Notre-Dame are very different structures. Notre-Dame is a symbol of strength and God while the Court of Miracles represents the filth of the Earth. Yet, as Hugos theme suggests, one cannot judge places, or men, by their appearances and the Court of Miracles proves to be the stronghold, while Notre-Dame houses the iniquity of the city.

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