User:BabyGirl1125/sandbox

Love In book eleven it goes on to say how no one heard from Quasimodo, and then starts to describe the death of his beloved Esmeralda and her execution. Near the end of the story, it goes on to describe the gibbet where all the dead corps were thrown. Well throughout the entire story you hear of how Quasimodo and Esmeralda fall in love, but at their separation Quasimodo disappears and no one knows what becomes of him. During the description of the gibbet it is said there was remains of a women, still in old rags which were once white, with a string of adrézarach beads around her neck. The skeleton was in the embrace of another skeletal remain, these of which were of a man. It was obvious his spine was crooked, and one leg was shorter than the other, but it was apparent he was not hanged but rather just hid there and eventually died. Well, when they attempted to detach the remains, they just fell to dust. Victor Hugo uses the theme of love in book eleven and portrays it to be everlasting. When the people tried to break the embrace, the skeleton turned to dust, showing that true love cannot be broken and without it we fall apart. “Hence, the man to whom it had belonged had come thither and had died there” This line states how when someone is in love with another person, they would do anything to be with them, even after they are gone. The man of which the remains belonged to obviously willing sat there and waited with his beloved women, just waiting to be with her again. He could of possibly died from a broken heart, but that just proves that true love is stronger than death and if someone has your heart you will do anything to keep them with you. Sometimes, even after they’re already dead.