Hopping Out the Ceiling Revenge is a dangerous action. Edgar Allan Poe’s, “Hop-Frog”, revolves around Hop-Frog, who is taunted daily by the king and his ministers (ADJ). He decides to make an insane plan for revenge. Hop-Frog is not justified in his actions of vengeance because he is mad about his bad day, he makes a crazy plan, and he burns the king and his ministers alive, which is too extreme for any situation. Hop-Frog begins the story having a bad day and an overall bad life. It is Hop-Frog’s birthday and the king forces him to drink wine to his nonexistent friends, which hurt Hop-Frogs feelings because he was captured and does not want to be in this kingdom in the first place. To top off his terrible day, his friend Trippetta stands up for Hop-Frog but this …show more content…
Hop-Frog feels great gratitude towards Trippetta for trying to stand up for him, but he feels guilty because she is hurt and humiliated in the process. After this embarrassing moment (ADV), there is silence for about a minute and a half in which no one speaks and even the smallest of sounds can be heard. This silence is “interrupted by a low, but harsh and protracting grating sound which seemed to come at once from every corner of the room” (Poe). Following this sound, the king asks Hop-Frog why he is making the sound, but Hop-Frog denies that he is the one who is making it. The other people in the room claim that the sound is coming from outside of the room therefore cannot be coming from Hop-Frog. When Hop-Frog later sets the king and his ministers on fire,