Retelling of "A Tear for a Drop of Water

Hello! For your reference. A Tear for a Drop of Water On January 6, 1482, the people of Paris were immersed in the revelry of April Fools' Day. People carried the King of Fools on their shoulders and paraded him through the streets. The "King of Fools" has a tetrahedral nose, horseshoe-shaped mouth, one eye, hunchback, limp ...... in his deformities, but there is a kind of firmness and bravery, he is the Notre Dame of Paris bell ringer Gazimodo. Although he is very ugly, his heart is noble and pure. Suddenly someone shouted: "Esmeralda is here! Esmeralda is in the square!" The name caused a magic effect, and all the people flocked to the Piazza del Greve. Esmeralda, the gypsy girl, who could sing and dance well, was na?ve, beautiful and simple-hearted, and had lived on the streets for years, selling her wares for a living. On the square, Esmeralda is dancing, she is light, airy, happy, the audience of hundreds of thousands. Watching Esmeralda's passionate whirling dance, all the onlookers were transfixed, unsure whether this woman was a human being or an angel. There was one middle-aged man, with a grave, calm and somber face, who paid more attention to the dancing woman than the others, and from time to time uttered curses from his lips; he was Claude Vourolot, the vicar-general of Notre Dame de Paris. In a corner of the square, a friar, who had been robbed of her own daughter by the gypsies fifteen years before, was bawling Esmeralda out of the square in a pious, abhorrent voice, and Esmeralda was horrified and disturbed by the curses and bawling of both the vice-bishop and the friar. Esmeralda left the Piazza del Greve and traveled to an alley next to the square when suddenly two men leaped out and tried to snatch Esmeralda away. The young girl cried out for help, and in the nick of time, the royal guards passed by, and the captain of the guards, Phobos, saved the young girl. The man who robbed Esmeralda was captured by the guards, and he was Gazimodo. Gazimodo is an abandoned orphan who was adopted by Vuolo 16 years ago out of pity and compassion. From then on, he considered the vicar general as his only relative and obeyed him, and grew up to be the bell-ringer of Notre Dame. This time it was Vuolo who ordered the robbery. Vourollo fled while the guards were fighting with Gazimodo. The next day, Gazimodo was sentenced to be tortured in the Piazza del Grave, where the crowd of onlookers teased and abused the ugly man. Gazimodo suddenly saw Vourollo in the crowd, but the vice-priest, who had adopted him, scrambled to avoid his gaze. Gazimodo, who had been heavily whipped according to the rules of the penal code, was so thirsty that he shouted, "Give me water to drink!" The people were indifferent, and there was a roar of laughter. At that moment, Esmeralda stepped forward, and she brought the water gourd in her bosom to Gazimodo's parched mouth. The people were touched by Esmeralda's gesture of compassion for such an ugly and vicious man. Gazimodo finished his punishment and still went back to Notre Dame as a bell-ringer. Mocked by the world because of his deformity, he was filled with hatred for mankind. Esmeralda's act of repaying his grudges with kindness touched him, and from then on, he had unlimited gratitude and pure adoration for Esmeralda. Esmeralda appeared in the streets as usual. The captain of the guards, Vorbis, left a deep impression on Esmeralda, who was not only her savior, but also the idol of her love and worship. Vorbis comes from a noble family, he is young, handsome and beautiful, but an old hand at playing with women. By chance, Forbes knew the secret in the heart of this beautiful gypsy girl and asked Esmeralda to rendezvous at night in a small inn. Vorbis got so carried away that he told Vulolo's brother the secret of his rendezvous with Esmeralda. When Vourollo learns of this, he is so jealous that he sees the woman he covets falling into the arms of another man, that he disguises himself in a disguise, comes to the inn, and stabs Vorbis with a dagger. Vuolo escaped. Esmeralda is arrested, she succumbs to the crime, and the news of the gypsy girl's assassination of the captain of the guard soon spreads throughout the city, and Esmeralda is sentenced by the court to be hanged. Esmeralda was locked up in a dark dungeon, and she was like a poor fly. At night, Vuolo comes secretly to the dungeon and unabashedly expresses his love for Esmeralda, suggesting that he take her with him to escape. Esmeralda rejects him with bitter curses. The next day, Esmeralda was executed and taken to the Plaza de Mahévy to pray before her death. Phoebus, who had recovered from his wounds, looked on indifferently at the young girl, not daring to come forward to prove her innocence. At that moment, Gazimodo rushed out of the church, struck down the executioner, lifted the girl high on his shoulders, and ran into the church. At the sight of this feat, the crowd erupted in cheers, moved by the fact that Gazimodo had saved a condemned prisoner, and that two extremely unfortunate people had so saved and helped each other! The king's army pursues Esmeralda, and Vuolo sneaks into the church with a scarf and tricks Esmeralda out under the pretense of helping to escape, and Vuolo drags Esmeralda to the gallows in the Piazza del Grevo. The sun rose and Esmeralda swayed in the air with a knot around her neck. Vuolo watched this from the upper floor of Notre Dame and a devilish grin erupted on his face. When the grief-stricken Gazimodo saw the hanged maiden and that smile, he lunged forward and angrily pushed Vrollo off the top floor of the church. Vourollo fell like a falling tile onto the street stones and was left without a human form. Two years later, two joined bones were found in a cellar, one a deformed male body, without a single break in his collar bone, so that it was evident that he had not been hanged, but had come to his death on his own. When people tried to separate him from the female corpse he was holding, the bones turned to dust.