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  • -BOOK FOURTH. CHAPTER II.

  • CLAUDE FROLLO.

  • In fact, Claude Frollo was no common person.

  • He belonged to one of those middle-class families which were called indifferently,

  • in the impertinent language of the last century, the high bourgeoise or the petty

  • nobility.

  • This family had inherited from the brothers Paclet the fief of Tirechappe, which was

  • dependent upon the Bishop of Paris, and whose twenty-one houses had been in the

  • thirteenth century the object of so many suits before the official.

  • As possessor of this fief, Claude Frollo was one of the twenty-seven seigneurs

  • keeping claim to a manor in fee in Paris and its suburbs; and for a long time, his

  • name was to be seen inscribed in this

  • quality, between the Hotel de Tancarville, belonging to Master Francois Le Rez, and

  • the college of Tours, in the records deposited at Saint Martin des Champs.

  • Claude Frollo had been destined from infancy, by his parents, to the

  • ecclesiastical profession.

  • He had been taught to read in Latin; he had been trained to keep his eyes on the ground

  • and to speak low.

  • While still a child, his father had cloistered him in the college of Torchi in

  • the University. There it was that he had grown up, on the

  • missal and the lexicon.

  • Moreover, he was a sad, grave, serious child, who studied ardently, and learned

  • quickly; he never uttered a loud cry in recreation hour, mixed but little in the

  • bacchanals of the Rue du Fouarre, did not

  • know what it was to dare alapas et capillos laniare, and had cut no figure in that

  • revolt of 1463, which the annalists register gravely, under the title of "The

  • sixth trouble of the University."

  • He seldom rallied the poor students of Montaigu on the cappettes from which they

  • derived their name, or the bursars of the college of Dormans on their shaved tonsure,

  • and their surtout parti-colored of bluish-

  • green, blue, and violet cloth, azurini coloris et bruni, as says the charter of

  • the Cardinal des Quatre-Couronnes.

  • On the other hand, he was assiduous at the great and the small schools of the Rue

  • Saint Jean de Beauvais.

  • The first pupil whom the Abbe de Saint Pierre de Val, at the moment of beginning

  • his reading on canon law, always perceived, glued to a pillar of the school Saint-

  • Vendregesile, opposite his rostrum, was

  • Claude Frollo, armed with his horn ink- bottle, biting his pen, scribbling on his

  • threadbare knee, and, in winter, blowing on his fingers.

  • The first auditor whom Messire Miles d'Isliers, doctor in decretals, saw arrive

  • every Monday morning, all breathless, at the opening of the gates of the school of

  • the Chef-Saint-Denis, was Claude Frollo.

  • Thus, at sixteen years of age, the young clerk might have held his own, in mystical

  • theology, against a father of the church; in canonical theology, against a father of

  • the councils; in scholastic theology, against a doctor of Sorbonne.

  • Theology conquered, he had plunged into decretals.

  • From the "Master of Sentences," he had passed to the "Capitularies of

  • Charlemagne;" and he had devoured in succession, in his appetite for science,

  • decretals upon decretals, those of

  • Theodore, Bishop of Hispalus; those of Bouchard, Bishop of Worms; those of Yves,

  • Bishop of Chartres; next the decretal of Gratian, which succeeded the capitularies

  • of Charlemagne; then the collection of

  • Gregory IX.; then the Epistle of Superspecula, of Honorius III.

  • He rendered clear and familiar to himself that vast and tumultuous period of civil

  • law and canon law in conflict and at strife with each other, in the chaos of the Middle

  • Ages,--a period which Bishop Theodore opens

  • in 618, and which Pope Gregory closes in 1227.

  • Decretals digested, he flung himself upon medicine, on the liberal arts.

  • He studied the science of herbs, the science of unguents; he became an expert in

  • fevers and in contusions, in sprains and abcesses.

  • Jacques d' Espars would have received him as a physician; Richard Hellain, as a

  • surgeon. He also passed through all the degrees of

  • licentiate, master, and doctor of arts.

  • He studied the languages, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, a triple sanctuary then very little

  • frequented. His was a veritable fever for acquiring and

  • hoarding, in the matter of science.

  • At the age of eighteen, he had made his way through the four faculties; it seemed to

  • the young man that life had but one sole object: learning.

  • It was towards this epoch, that the excessive heat of the summer of 1466 caused

  • that grand outburst of the plague which carried off more than forty thousand souls

  • in the vicomty of Paris, and among others,

  • as Jean de Troyes states, "Master Arnoul, astrologer to the king, who was a very fine

  • man, both wise and pleasant."

  • The rumor spread in the University that the Rue Tirechappe was especially devastated by

  • the malady. It was there that Claude's parents resided,

  • in the midst of their fief.

  • The young scholar rushed in great alarm to the paternal mansion.

  • When he entered it, he found that both father and mother had died on the preceding

  • day.

  • A very young brother of his, who was in swaddling clothes, was still alive and

  • crying abandoned in his cradle.

  • This was all that remained to Claude of his family; the young man took the child under

  • his arm and went off in a pensive mood. Up to that moment, he had lived only in

  • science; he now began to live in life.

  • This catastrophe was a crisis in Claude's existence.

  • Orphaned, the eldest, head of the family at the age of nineteen, he felt himself rudely

  • recalled from the reveries of school to the realities of this world.

  • Then, moved with pity, he was seized with passion and devotion towards that child,

  • his brother; a sweet and strange thing was a human affection to him, who had hitherto

  • loved his books alone.

  • This affection developed to a singular point; in a soul so new, it was like a

  • first love.

  • Separated since infancy from his parents, whom he had hardly known; cloistered and

  • immured, as it were, in his books; eager above all things to study and to learn;

  • exclusively attentive up to that time, to

  • his intelligence which broadened in science, to his imagination, which expanded

  • in letters,--the poor scholar had not yet had time to feel the place of his heart.

  • This young brother, without mother or father, this little child which had fallen

  • abruptly from heaven into his arms, made a new man of him.

  • He perceived that there was something else in the world besides the speculations of

  • the Sorbonne, and the verses of Homer; that man needed affections; that life without

  • tenderness and without love was only a set of dry, shrieking, and rending wheels.

  • Only, he imagined, for he was at the age when illusions are as yet replaced only by

  • illusions, that the affections of blood and family were the sole ones necessary, and

  • that a little brother to love sufficed to fill an entire existence.

  • He threw himself, therefore, into the love for his little Jehan with the passion of a

  • character already profound, ardent, concentrated; that poor frail creature,

  • pretty, fair-haired, rosy, and curly,--that

  • orphan with another orphan for his only support, touched him to the bottom of his

  • heart; and grave thinker as he was, he set to meditating upon Jehan with an infinite

  • compassion.

  • He kept watch and ward over him as over something very fragile, and very worthy of

  • care. He was more than a brother to the child; he

  • became a mother to him.

  • Little Jehan had lost his mother while he was still at the breast; Claude gave him to

  • a nurse.

  • Besides the fief of Tirechappe, he had inherited from his father the fief of

  • Moulin, which was a dependency of the square tower of Gentilly; it was a mill on

  • a hill, near the chateau of Winchestre (Bicetre).

  • There was a miller's wife there who was nursing a fine child; it was not far from

  • the university, and Claude carried the little Jehan to her in his own arms.

  • From that time forth, feeling that he had a burden to bear, he took life very

  • seriously.

  • The thought of his little brother became not only his recreation, but the object of

  • his studies.

  • He resolved to consecrate himself entirely to a future for which he was responsible in

  • the sight of God, and never to have any other wife, any other child than the

  • happiness and fortune of his brother.

  • Therefore, he attached himself more closely than ever to the clerical profession.

  • His merits, his learning, his quality of immediate vassal of the Bishop of Paris,

  • threw the doors of the church wide open to him.

  • At the age of twenty, by special dispensation of the Holy See, he was a

  • priest, and served as the youngest of the chaplains of Notre-Dame the altar which is

  • called, because of the late mass which is said there, altare pigrorum.

  • There, plunged more deeply than ever in his dear books, which he quitted only to run

  • for an hour to the fief of Moulin, this mixture of learning and austerity, so rare

  • at his age, had promptly acquired for him

  • the respect and admiration of the monastery.

  • From the cloister, his reputation as a learned man had passed to the people, among

  • whom it had changed a little, a frequent occurrence at that time, into reputation as

  • a sorcerer.

  • It was at the moment when he was returning, on Quasimodo day, from saying his mass at

  • the Altar of the Lazy, which was by the side of the door leading to the nave on the

  • right, near the image of the Virgin, that

  • his attention had been attracted by the group of old women chattering around the

  • bed for foundlings.

  • Then it was that he approached the unhappy little creature, which was so hated and so

  • menaced.

  • That distress, that deformity, that abandonment, the thought of his young

  • brother, the idea which suddenly occurred to him, that if he were to die, his dear

  • little Jehan might also be flung miserably

  • on the plank for foundlings,--all this had gone to his heart simultaneously; a great

  • pity had moved in him, and he had carried off the child.

  • When he removed the child from the sack, he found it greatly deformed, in very sooth.

  • The poor little wretch had a wart on his left eye, his head placed directly on his

  • shoulders, his spinal column was crooked, his breast bone prominent, and his legs

  • bowed; but he appeared to be lively; and

  • although it was impossible to say in what language he lisped, his cry indicated

  • considerable force and health.

  • Claude's compassion increased at the sight of this ugliness; and he made a vow in his

  • heart to rear the child for the love of his brother, in order that, whatever might be

  • the future faults of the little Jehan, he

  • should have beside him that charity done for his sake.

  • It was a sort of investment of good works, which he was effecting in the name of his

  • young brother; it was a stock of good works which he wished to amass in advance for

  • him, in case the little rogue should some

  • day find himself short of that coin, the only sort which is received at the toll-bar

  • of paradise.

  • He baptized his adopted child, and gave him the name of Quasimodo, either because he

  • desired thereby to mark the day, when he had found him, or because he wished to

  • designate by that name to what a degree the

  • poor little creature was incomplete, and hardly sketched out.

  • In fact, Quasimodo, blind, hunchbacked, knock-kneed, was only an "almost."

-BOOK FOURTH. CHAPTER II.

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