Victor Hugo · 1831
61 chapters · 193,524 words
Preface
I: The Grand Hall
II: Pierre Gringoire
III: Monsieur the Cardinal
IV: Master Jacques Coppenole
V: Quasimodo
VI: Esmeralda
I: From Charybdis to Scylla
II: The Place de Grève
III: Kisses for Blows
IV: The Inconveniences of Following a Pretty Woman Through the Streets in the Evening
V: Result of the Dangers
VI: The Broken Jug
VII: A Bridal Night
I: Notre-Dame
II: A Bird’s-Eye View of Paris
I: Good Souls
II: Claude Frollo
III: Immanis Pecoris Custos, Immanior Ipse
IV: The Dog and His Master
V: More About Claude Frollo
VI: Unpopularity
I: Abbas Beati Martini
II: This Will Kill That
I: An Impartial Glance at the Ancient Magistracy
II: The Rat-Hole
III: History of a Leavened Cake of Maize
IV: A Tear for a Drop of Water
V: End of the Story of the Cake
I: The Danger of Confiding One’s Secret to a Goat
II: A Priest and a Philosopher Are Two Different Things
III: The Bells
IV: Ἀνάγκη
V: The Two Men Clothed in Black
VI: The Effect Which Seven Oaths in the Open Air Can Produce
VII: The Mysterious Monk
VIII: The Utility of Windows Which Open on the River
I: The Crown Changed Into a Dry Leaf
II: Continuation of the Crown Which Was Changed Into a Dry Leaf
III: End of the Crown Which Was Turned Into a Dry Leaf
IV: Lasciate Ogni Speranza—Leave All Hope Behind, Ye Who Enter Here
V: The Mother
VI: Three Human Hearts Differently Constructed
I: Delirium
II: Hunchbacked, One-Eyed, Lame
III: Deaf
IV: Earthenware and Crystal
V: The Key to the Red Door
VI: Continuation of the Key to the Red Door
I: Gringoire Has Many Good Ideas in Succession.—Rue des Bernardins
II: Turn Vagabond
III: Long Live Mirth
IV: An Awkward Friend
V: The Retreat in Which Monsieur Louis of France Says His Prayers
VI: Little Sword in Pocket
VII: Châteaupers to the Rescue
I: The Little Shoe
II: “La Creatura Bella Bianco Vestita”
III: The Marriage of Phoebus
IV: The Marriage of Quasimodo
Note