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    In his novel A Tale of Two Cities‚ Charles Dickens has a contemptuous tone towards the mob. The French peasants and their actions are described critically by Dickens throughout the novel. While Dickens clearly supports the peasants’ fight against oppression‚ his tone suggests that he is opposed to the methods that they use to achieve their goals. As the mob storms the Bastille prison‚ Dickens writes that “every living creature there held life as of no account‚ and was demented with a passionate readiness

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    Love‚ Sacrifice‚ and Revolution During the French Revolution‚ the aristocracy and those suspected of helping them were slaughtered‚ causing people to take drastic measures to escape France and save themselves. In A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens‚ characters take drastic measures as well‚ but for other characters and not themselves. Why would they risk their sanity‚ hearing‚ or lives for the happiness of someone else? Dickens shows us many times that love is what pushes people to make sacrifices

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    he recurring theme in literature that is “the classic war between passion and responsibility” transpires throughout A Tale of Two Cities. Dickens using Jerry Cruncher to represent this theme through his conflict between his personal pride and his moral duties. The nature of this conflict affects Cruncher and has overall significance to the work. Cruncher‚ who struggles to support his family‚ must dig graves at night and sell the bodies to doctors for money. This conflicts with his morals because

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    The nature of mobs is a significant theme in “A Tale of Two Cities.” In both the movie and the book‚ mobs are portrayed as powerful. Mobs are made up of many people with the same thoughts and motives. Mobs can also be very destructive for that same reason. Dickens uses the mob mentality to depict the bloody horror and the ultimate success of the French Revolution. In the book‚ Dickens portrays the people as having the hatred necessary for mob violence. Immediately‚ the book shows us an example

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    example is when Darnay gives up his aristocratic lifestyle to pursue life in England. Another example is Carton when he sacrifices his life in order to save Darnay‚ so that Darnay can flee the country with Lucie. Another obvious them in A Tale of Two Cities is love and hate. An obvious example of love is Miss Pross protecting Lucie’s life by fighting off Madame Defarge. Miss Pross risks her own life to save another. The best example of love is Carton’s promise to Lucie. In order to promise his

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    Comic relief is an important theatrical convention that makes the story more interesting and appealing to readers. In Charles Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities‚ Dickens uses one of his minor but fascinating characters‚ Jerry Cruncher‚ to depict this. The two or three chapters dealing with Jerry Cruncher and his family life are humorous and he also illustrates the terrible poverty during the 18th century. And despite the novel’s tragic scenes and symbolic images‚ Dickens uses Jerry to lighten things

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    Juxtaposition in “A Tale of Two Cities”: QUOTES: LIGHT: "The golden thread that bound them all together"(208) "The opened half door was opened a little further. A broad ray of light fell into the garret." (35)- Light was let into Doctor Manette’s room. Where the Defarges (dark) had kept him. "Mr. Manette’s white head mingled with Lucie’s radiant hair‚ which warmed and lighted it as though it were the light of freedom shining on him." (40) – Representation of light. Helped him become free

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    In chapter five of Charles Dickens’ “A Tale of Two Cities‚” we learn just exactly who Sydney Carton is. Carton is compared to Stryver as the jackal‚ doing all the work for Stryver‚ while Stryver gets the credit. Chapter 5 is where Carton’s story begins. Dickens uses personification and gloomy diction to describe his attitude towards Carton as sympathetic. Using personification‚ Dickens starts the passage setting the scene Carton is in. Dickens says that‚ “the day was coldly looking in through

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    A TALE OF TWO CITIES Comparative Lit: A 1935 movie of Ronald Colman. Just before the outbreak of the French Revolution‚ Lucie Manette‚ a French girl reared in England‚ is shocked to learn from the banker Barsad that her father‚ Dr. Manette‚ is alive‚ but has been imprisoned for eighteen years in the infamous Parisian prison the Bastille. She accompanies Barsad to Paris and finds her father‚ now a broken man‚ staying with tavern owners named De Farge who are secretly working towards the revolution

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    In A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens‚ the death of Monsieur the Marquis is foreshadowed by descriptions of various objects turning crimson and the repeated mention of the Furies. The first description of a crimson object occurs in chapter eight and belongs to none other than Monsieur the Marquis himself. This occurs when he is heading back to his château in his carriage and “the sunset struck so brilliantly… that its occupant was steeped in crimson” (Dickens 138). This image of Monsieur the

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