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Quasimodo's physical deformities, which include his famous hump, invoke fear in others. The novel opens to a carnival, where Quasimodo's physical appearance is mistaken for a costume.
He was adopted as a baby by Claude Frollo and made to be the bell-ringer in the Cathedral. Deaf, blind, and barely able to speak, he falls in love with the young gypsy girl Esmeralda.
Many adaptations and movie versions of Hugo's novel have been made. Several actors have played Quasimodo including:
Quasimodo Sunday is, in the liturgical year, the first Sunday after Easter (also known as Low Sunday). The name is said to come from the opening line of the introit of the day: "Almost in the way that newborn babies do, desire the rational milk without trickery..." (in LatinAlternative meanings: See Latin (disambiguation Latin was the language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. It gained great importance as the formal language of the Roman Empire. All Romance languages are descended from Latin, and ma, Quasi modo geniti infantes, rationale sine dolo lac concupiscite...), and also from the fact that the observance that day is "almost in the manner" of Easter. It was on this day that the character Quasimodo (above) was discovered abandoned on the steps of Nôtre Dame; hence his name.
Fictional characters