When the King’s council took Hop Frog captive and gave him to the King as a present, they took Hop Frog for something lesser than them. Even though Hop frog was a dwarf, he used his differences to his advantage in performing revenge. He proved to the King and his council that they mistook him for incompetent and Hop Frog made them pay. “ “Poor Fellow” he placed the goblet nervously on the table and looked round upon the company with a half intense stare, they all seemed highly amused at the success of the kings joke.” (Poe) In this quote it is clear that Hop Frog is displeased when the King makes a joke about him. It also shows that Hop Frog was able to hide that anger so the council and King wouldn’t anticipate a revenge act.…
He was tempted to and he did not make the right decision he just keeped on drinking. Everyone in the town knows about him because he is so drunk all the time that they already know its him. “From this on it was “The Drunkard’s Progress,” as in the moral prints”(344 print, primary). Poor thing doesn’t know when to stop drinking and everyone in the town knows it. The town makes fun of him for being this way and his whole family has to deal with it.…
He will need a total of eight people, in which includes the king and seven minister. During the event, They will wear costumes of the Orangutan with chains and then scare off their guests. This is actually irony, because in the story Hop Frog has been the subject to ridicule and mockery at by the king and his men. By now, the Dwarf takes his turn to ridicule the wicked monarchs. The images of beast will fit them perfectly.…
In “The Canterbury Tales” by Geoffrey Chaucer, the pardoner would be inclined to sit with the summoner at the Tabard Inn due to their shared power abuses, their fraudulent activities, and their former relationship. The summoner abuses his authority to blackmail people into satisfying his selfish thirst for wine; meanwhile the pardoner also exploits others, but does so in a manner that fulfills his personal cravings for money. Both men would be reunited at the Tavern Inn when the pardoner realizes that the commotion coming from near the bar is the summoner vaunting about his many deceptions of others. Ultimately, Chaucer created of these characters to show how humans are susceptible to sin, specifically greed, with the hope to deter society…
The king held a great feast and invited all the princes and princesses of the land. When the king gave his speech to his guest, the queen ended up embarrassing him in the congregation. The queen sang while he was singing because she drank too much wine and became drunk. The guests that were at the feast laughed and laughed and the king felt embarrassed. The laws of the land were very clear royal families should not drink too much wine in order to be drunken.…
This uncontrollable anger is the reason why the unnamed narrator remains constantly intoxicated; he wishes to escape the Self because self awareness is a constant remainder of the pain he inflicted upon his beloved cat. “When reason returned with the morning-when I had slept off the fumes of the night’s debauch- I had experienced a sentiment half of horror, half remorse, for the crime of which I had been guilty … I again plunged into excess, and soon drowned in wine all memory of the deed.” (Poe 13). In this quote, Poe depicts the masochistic acts of the unnamed narrator. As the story continues, the Man feels such remorse that he hangs the cat with a noose on a tree in his garden. The black cat is a symbol of torment that the man must face every day as a memory of his abuse towards his beloved pet.…
Again, these guests show no regard for their safety, the safety of others, or the safety of their possessions, thus proving their reckless nature. But there is yet another facet to the recklessness of the alcohol consumption of these party-goers. Gatsby’s parties take place during the prohibition years. These people are roaring drunk at a huge party at a stranger’s house. (Fitzgerald) All it takes is one person in a bad mood to call the prohibition agents and everyone could be charged with alcohol possession and consumption.…
The quote indicates how Rex drinks, he can drink in a sophisticated manner, but he can also drink in a heavily manner; he creates a monster of a husband and dad. When sober, he would teach his children physics, Morse code, and other skills. All of this changes when he gets drunk. After drinking, he becomes a mad person who throws around chairs and threatens his wife and other people who come across him. On Jeanette 's birthday, Rex asks her what she might want as a present, her answer is for him to quit drinking, “You must be awfully ashamed of your old man,” Rex said (116).…
The king is notorious for loving jokes, but in the most horrible way that only a fat statistical king would love jokes. Hop frog is considered a fool, a cripple, and a dwarf by everyone in the kingdom and for years both Hop Frog and a girl named Trippetta have been mistreated by the king and his seven ministers. Being mistreated…
[Holden] wasn’t supposed to come back” (Salinger 6). This was because he was not applying himself at school. Clearly this was an unsafe rational as a lack in education can lead to a plethora of financial problems, but Holden does not recognize his grave mistake. Another continuous symptom of antisocial personality disorder is substance abuse. Holden’s behavior portrays a constant refusal to assimilate to social law, and it is accompanied with recurring lying.…