The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 5


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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.  
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