Hop-Frog, Trippetta, the king and his councilors, 1935 illustration by Arthur Rackham |
Hop-Frog
by Edgar Allan Poe, (published in 1845)
I NEVER knew
anyone so keenly alive to a joke as the king was. He seemed to live only for
joking. To tell a good story of the joke kind, and to tell it well, was the
surest road to his favor. Thus it happened that his seven ministers were all
noted for their accomplishments as jokers. They all took after the king, too,
in being large, corpulent, oily men, as well as inimitable jokers. Whether
people grow fat by joking, or whether there is something in fat itself which
predisposes to a joke, I have never been quite able to determine; but certain
it is that a lean joker is a rara avis in terris.
About the refinements, or, as he called them, the 'ghost' of
wit, the king troubled himself very little. He had an especial admiration for
breadth in a jest, and would often put up with length, for the sake of it.
Over-niceties wearied him. He would have preferred Rabelais' 'Gargantua' to the
'Zadig' of Voltaire: and, upon the whole, practical jokes suited his taste far
better than verbal ones.
At the date of my narrative, professing jesters had not
altogether gone out of fashion at court. Several of the great continental
'powers' still retain their 'fools,' who wore motley, with caps and bells, and
who were expected to be always ready with sharp witticisms, at a moment's
notice, in consideration of the crumbs that fell from the royal table.
Our king, as a matter of course, retained his 'fool.' The
fact is, he required something in the way of folly -- if only to counterbalance
the heavy wisdom of the seven wise men who were his ministers -- not to mention
himself.
His fool, or professional jester, was not only a fool,
however. His value was trebled in the eyes of the king, by the fact of his
being also a dwarf and a cripple. Dwarfs were as common at court, in those
days, as fools; and many monarchs would have found it difficult to get through
their days (days are rather longer at court than elsewhere) without both a
jester to laugh with, and a dwarf to laugh at. But, as I have already observed,
your jesters, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, are fat, round, and
unwieldy -- so that it was no small source of self-gratulation with our king
that, in Hop-Frog (this was the fool's name), he possessed a triplicate
treasure in one person.
I believe the name 'Hop-Frog' was not that given to the
dwarf by his sponsors at baptism, but it was conferred upon him, by general
consent of the several ministers, on account of his inability to walk as other
men do. In fact, Hop-Frog could only get along by a sort of interjectional gait
-- something between a leap and a wriggle -- a movement that afforded
illimitable amusement, and of course consolation, to the king, for
(notwithstanding the protuberance of his stomach and a constitutional swelling
of the head) the king, by his whole court, was accounted a capital figure.
But although Hop-Frog, through the distortion of his legs,
could move only with great pain and difficulty along a road or floor, the
prodigious muscular power which nature seemed to have bestowed upon his arms,
by way of compensation for deficiency in the lower limbs, enabled him to
perform many feats of wonderful dexterity, where trees or ropes were in
question, or any thing else to climb. At such exercises he certainly much more
resembled a squirrel, or a small monkey, than a frog.
I am not able to say, with precision, from what country
Hop-Frog originally came. It was from some barbarous region, however, that no
person ever heard of -- a vast distance from the court of our king. Hop-Frog,
and a young girl very little less dwarfish than himself (although of exquisite
proportions, and a marvellous dancer), had been forcibly carried off from their
respective homes in adjoining provinces, and sent as presents to the king, by
one of his ever-victorious generals.
Under these circumstances, it is not to be wondered at that
a close intimacy arose between the two little captives. Indeed, they soon
became sworn friends. Hop-Frog, who, although he made a great deal of sport,
was by no means popular, had it not in his power to render Trippetta many
services; but she, on account of her grace and exquisite beauty (although a
dwarf), was universally admired and petted; so she possessed much influence;
and never failed to use it, whenever she could, for the benefit of Hop-Frog.
On some grand state occasion -- I forgot what -- the king
determined to have a masquerade, and whenever a masquerade or any thing of that
kind, occurred at our court, then the talents, both of Hop-Frog and Trippetta
were sure to be called into play. Hop-Frog, in especial, was so inventive in
the way of getting up pageants, suggesting novel characters, and arranging
costumes, for masked balls, that nothing could be done, it seems, without his
assistance.
The night appointed for the fete had arrived. A gorgeous
hall had been fitted up, under Trippetta's eye, with every kind of device which
could possibly give eclat to a masquerade. The whole court was in a fever of
expectation. As for costumes and characters, it might well be supposed that
everybody had come to a decision on such points. Many had made up their minds
(as to what roles they should assume) a week, or even a month, in advance; and,
in fact, there was not a particle of indecision anywhere -- except in the case
of the king and his seven minsters. Why they hesitated I never could tell,
unless they did it by way of a joke. More probably, they found it difficult, on
account of being so fat, to make up their minds. At all events, time flew; and,
as a last resort they sent for Trippetta and Hop-Frog.
When the two little friends obeyed the summons of the king
they found him sitting at his wine with the seven members of his cabinet
council; but the monarch appeared to be in a very ill humor. He knew that
Hop-Frog was not fond of wine, for it excited the poor cripple almost to
madness; and madness is no comfortable feeling. But the king loved his
practical jokes, and took pleasure in forcing Hop-Frog to drink and (as the
king called it) 'to be merry.'
"Come here, Hop-Frog," said he, as the jester and
his friend entered the room; "swallow this bumper to the health of your
absent friends, [here Hop-Frog sighed,] and then let us have the benefit of
your invention. We want characters -- characters, man -- something novel -- out
of the way. We are wearied with this everlasting sameness. Come, drink! the
wine will brighten your wits."
Hop-Frog endeavored, as usual, to get up a jest in reply to
these advances from the king; but the effort was too much. It happened to be
the poor dwarf's birthday, and the command to drink to his 'absent friends'
forced the tears to his eyes. Many large, bitter drops fell into the goblet as
he took it, humbly, from the hand of the tyrant.
"Ah! ha! ha!" roared the latter, as the dwarf
reluctantly drained the beaker. -- "See what a glass of good wine can do!
Why, your eyes are shining already!"
Poor fellow! his large eyes gleamed, rather than shone; for
the effect of wine on his excitable brain was not more powerful than
instantaneous. He placed the goblet nervously on the table, and looked round
upon the company with a half -- insane stare. They all seemed highly amused at
the success of the king's 'joke.'
"And now to business," said the prime minister, a
very fat man.
"Yes," said the King; "Come lend us your
assistance. Characters, my fine fellow; we stand in need of characters -- all
of us -- ha! ha! ha!" and as this was seriously meant for a joke, his
laugh was chorused by the seven.
Hop-Frog also laughed although feebly and somewhat vacantly.
"Come, come," said the king, impatiently,
"have you nothing to suggest?"
"I am endeavoring to think of something novel,"
replied the dwarf, abstractedly, for he was quite bewildered by the wine.
"Endeavoring!" cried the tyrant, fiercely;
"what do you mean by that? Ah, I perceive. You are Sulky, and want more
wine. Here, drink this!" and he poured out another goblet full and offered
it to the cripple, who merely gazed at it, gasping for breath.
"Drink, I say!" shouted the monster, "or by
the fiends-"
The dwarf hesitated. The king grew purple with rage. The
courtiers smirked. Trippetta, pale as a corpse, advanced to the monarch's seat,
and, falling on her knees before him, implored him to spare her friend.
The tyrant regarded her, for some moments, in evident wonder
at her audacity. He seemed quite at a loss what to do or say -- how most
becomingly to express his indignation. At last, without uttering a syllable, he
pushed her violently from him, and threw the contents of the brimming goblet in
her face.
The poor girl got up the best she could, and, not daring
even to sigh, resumed her position at the foot of the table.
There was a dead silence for about half a minute, during
which the falling of a leaf, or of a feather, might have been heard. It was
interrupted by a low, but harsh and protracted grating sound which seemed to
come at once from every corner of the room.
"What -- what -- what are you making that noise
for?" demanded the king, turning furiously to the dwarf.
The latter seemed to have recovered, in great measure, from
his intoxication, and looking fixedly but quietly into the tyrant's face,
merely ejaculated:
"I -- I? How could it have been me?"
"The sound appeared to come from without,"
observed one of the courtiers. "I fancy it was the parrot at the window,
whetting his bill upon his cage-wires."
"True," replied the monarch, as if much relieved
by the suggestion; "but, on the honor of a knight, I could have sworn that
it was the gritting of this vagabond's teeth."
Hereupon the dwarf laughed (the king was too confirmed a
joker to object to any one's laughing), and displayed a set of large, powerful,
and very repulsive teeth. Moreover, he avowed his perfect willingness to
swallow as much wine as desired. The monarch was pacified; and having drained
another bumper with no very perceptible ill effect, Hop-Frog entered at once,
and with spirit, into the plans for the masquerade.
"I cannot tell what was the association of idea,"
observed he, very tranquilly, and as if he had never tasted wine in his life,
"but just after your majesty, had struck the girl and thrown the wine in
her face -- just after your majesty had done this, and while the parrot was
making that odd noise outside the window, there came into my mind a capital
diversion -- one of my own country frolics -- often enacted among us, at our
masquerades: but here it will be new altogether. Unfortunately, however, it
requires a company of eight persons and-"
"Here we are!" cried the king, laughing at his
acute discovery of the coincidence; "eight to a fraction -- I and my seven
ministers. Come! what is the diversion?"
"We call it," replied the cripple, "the Eight
Chained Ourang-Outangs, and it really is excellent sport if well enacted."
"We will enact it," remarked the king, drawing
himself up, and lowering his eyelids.
"The beauty of the game," continued Hop-Frog,
"lies in the fright it occasions among the women."
"Capital!" roared in chorus the monarch and his
ministry.
"I will equip you as ourang-outangs," proceeded
the dwarf; "leave all that to me. The resemblance shall be so striking,
that the company of masqueraders will take you for real beasts -- and of
course, they will be as much terrified as astonished."
"Oh, this is exquisite!" exclaimed the king.
"Hop-Frog! I will make a man of you."
"The chains are for the purpose of increasing the
confusion by their jangling. You are supposed to have escaped, en masse, from
your keepers. Your majesty cannot conceive the effect produced, at a
masquerade, by eight chained ourang-outangs, imagined to be real ones by most
of the company; and rushing in with savage cries, among the crowd of delicately
and gorgeously habited men and women. The contrast is inimitable!"
"It must be," said the king: and the council arose
hurriedly (as it was growing late), to put in execution the scheme of Hop-Frog.
His mode of equipping the party as ourang-outangs was very
simple, but effective enough for his purposes. The animals in question had, at
the epoch of my story, very rarely been seen in any part of the civilized
world; and as the imitations made by the dwarf were sufficiently beast-like and
more than sufficiently hideous, their truthfulness to nature was thus thought
to be secured.
The king and his ministers were first encased in
tight-fitting stockinet shirts and drawers. They were then saturated with tar.
At this stage of the process, some one of the party suggested feathers; but the
suggestion was at once overruled by the dwarf, who soon convinced the eight, by
ocular demonstration, that the hair of such a brute as the ourang-outang was
much more efficiently represented by flax. A thick coating of the latter was
accordingly plastered upon the coating of tar. A long chain was now procured.
First, it was passed about the waist of the king, and tied, then about another
of the party, and also tied; then about all successively, in the same manner.
When this chaining arrangement was complete, and the party stood as far apart from
each other as possible, they formed a circle; and to make all things appear
natural, Hop-Frog passed the residue of the chain in two diameters, at right
angles, across the circle, after the fashion adopted, at the present day, by
those who capture Chimpanzees, or other large apes, in Borneo.
The grand saloon in which the masquerade was to take place,
was a circular room, very lofty, and receiving the light of the sun only
through a single window at top. At night (the season for which the apartment
was especially designed) it was illuminated principally by a large chandelier,
depending by a chain from the centre of the sky-light, and lowered, or
elevated, by means of a counter-balance as usual; but (in order not to look
unsightly) this latter passed outside the cupola and over the roof.
The arrangements of the room had been left to Trippetta's
superintendence; but, in some particulars, it seems, she had been guided by the
calmer judgment of her friend the dwarf. At his suggestion it was that, on this
occasion, the chandelier was removed. Its waxen drippings (which, in weather so
warm, it was quite impossible to prevent) would have been seriously detrimental
to the rich dresses of the guests, who, on account of the crowded state of the
saloon, could not all be expected to keep from out its centre; that is to say,
from under the chandelier. Additional sconces were set in various parts of the
hall, out of the war, and a flambeau, emitting sweet odor, was placed in the
right hand of each of the Caryatides that stood against the wall -- some fifty
or sixty altogether.
The eight ourang-outangs, taking Hop-Frog's advice, waited
patiently until midnight (when the room was thoroughly filled with
masqueraders) before making their appearance. No sooner had the clock ceased
striking, however, than they rushed, or rather rolled in, all together -- for
the impediments of their chains caused most of the party to fall, and all to
stumble as they entered.
The excitement among the masqueraders was prodigious, and
filled the heart of the king with glee. As had been anticipated, there were not
a few of the guests who supposed the ferocious-looking creatures to be beasts
of some kind in reality, if not precisely ourang-outangs. Many of the women
swooned with affright; and had not the king taken the precaution to exclude all
weapons from the saloon, his party might soon have expiated their frolic in
their blood. As it was, a general rush was made for the doors; but the king had
ordered them to be locked immediately upon his entrance; and, at the dwarf's
suggestion, the keys had been deposited with him.
While the tumult was at its height, and each masquerader
attentive only to his own safety (for, in fact, there was much real danger from
the pressure of the excited crowd), the chain by which the chandelier
ordinarily hung, and which had been drawn up on its removal, might have been
seen very gradually to descend, until its hooked extremity came within three
feet of the floor.
Soon after this, the king and his seven friends having
reeled about the hall in all directions, found themselves, at length, in its
centre, and, of course, in immediate contact with the chain. While they were
thus situated, the dwarf, who had followed noiselessly at their heels, inciting
them to keep up the commotion, took hold of their own chain at the intersection
of the two portions which crossed the circle diametrically and at right angles.
Here, with the rapidity of thought, he inserted the hook from which the
chandelier had been wont to depend; and, in an instant, by some unseen agency,
the chandelier-chain was drawn so far upward as to take the hook out of reach,
and, as an inevitable consequence, to drag the ourang-outangs together in close
connection, and face to face.
The masqueraders, by this time, had recovered, in some
measure, from their alarm; and, beginning to regard the whole matter as a
well-contrived pleasantry, set up a loud shout of laughter at the predicament
of the apes.
"Leave them to me!" now screamed Hop-Frog, his
shrill voice making itself easily heard through all the din. "Leave them
to me. I fancy I know them. If I can only get a good look at them, I can soon
tell who they are."
Here, scrambling over the heads of the crowd, he managed to
get to the wall; when, seizing a flambeau from one of the Caryatides, he
returned, as he went, to the centre of the room-leaping, with the agility of a
monkey, upon the kings head, and thence clambered a few feet up the chain; holding
down the torch to examine the group of ourang-outangs, and still screaming:
"I shall soon find out who they are!"
And now, while the whole assembly (the apes included) were
convulsed with laughter, the jester suddenly uttered a shrill whistle; when the
chain flew violently up for about thirty feet -- dragging with it the dismayed
and struggling ourang-outangs, and leaving them suspended in mid-air between
the sky-light and the floor. Hop-Frog, clinging to the chain as it rose, still
maintained his relative position in respect to the eight maskers, and still (as
if nothing were the matter) continued to thrust his torch down toward them, as
though endeavoring to discover who they were.
So thoroughly astonished was the whole company at this
ascent, that a dead silence, of about a minute's duration, ensued. It was
broken by just such a low, harsh, grating sound, as had before attracted the
attention of the king and his councillors when the former threw the wine in the
face of Trippetta. But, on the present occasion, there could be no question as
to whence the sound issued. It came from the fang-like teeth of the dwarf, who
ground them and gnashed them as he foamed at the mouth, and glared, with an
expression of maniacal rage, into the upturned countenances of the king and his
seven companions.
"Ah, ha!" said at length the infuriated jester.
"Ah, ha! I begin to see who these people are now!" Here, pretending
to scrutinize the king more closely, he held the flambeau to the flaxen coat
which enveloped him, and which instantly burst into a sheet of vivid flame. In
less than half a minute the whole eight ourang-outangs were blazing fiercely,
amid the shrieks of the multitude who gazed at them from below,
horror-stricken, and without the power to render them the slightest assistance.
At length the flames, suddenly increasing in virulence,
forced the jester to climb higher up the chain, to be out of their reach; and,
as he made this movement, the crowd again sank, for a brief instant, into
silence. The dwarf seized his opportunity, and once more spoke:
"I now see distinctly." he said, "what manner
of people these maskers are. They are a great king and his seven
privy-councillors, -- a king who does not scruple to strike a defenceless girl
and his seven councillors who abet him in the outrage. As for myself, I am
simply Hop-Frog, the jester -- and this is my last jest."
Owing to the high combustibility of both the flax and the
tar to which it adhered, the dwarf had scarcely made an end of his brief speech
before the work of vengeance was complete. The eight corpses swung in their
chains, a fetid, blackened, hideous, and indistinguishable mass. The cripple
hurled his torch at them, clambered leisurely to the ceiling, and disappeared
through the sky-light.
It is supposed that Trippetta, stationed on the roof of the
saloon, had been the accomplice of her friend in his fiery revenge, and that,
together, they effected their escape to their own country: for neither was seen
again.
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