A strong example portrayed is the book is the moment Marqui’s chateau was set afire by a revolutionary in the area . Dickens speaks as if he is writing from God’s perspective of the world watching the event occur from above. He moves out from the single house to a whole shot of France he then says “the fierce [fire] figures were steadily wending east, west, north, and south” (Dickens 240). It is as if France was becoming miserable, fiery hell, and that was exactly what Dickens wanted the readers to think . This is a large symbol throughout the book, which is that France is hell and that the citizens of the country cannot escape the fiery …show more content…
Dickens fuses the past, present, and future in one line, “it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known” (Dickens 386). This quote is associating itself with the catholic saying “ Jesus has risen”, this symbol in the book tells the reader that revolution is a cycle of life, it will happen in the future, it happened in the past, and it is happening in your life at this moment. Dickens's use of the infinite tense proves that revolution is unavoidable, it will always be a nature of