Wednesday, November 13, 2019
A Tale of Two Cities :: essays research papers
 A Tale of Two Cities    In the fictitious novel Tale of Two Cities, the author, Charles   Dickens, lays out a brilliant plot. Charles Dickens was born in   England on February 7, 1812 near the south coast. His family moved to   London when he was ten years old and quickly went into debt. To help   support himself, Charles went to work at a blacking warehouse when he   was twelve. His father was soon imprisoned for debt and shortly   thereafter the rest of the family split apart. Charles continued to   work at the blacking warehouse even after his father inherited some   money and got out of prison. When he was thirteen, Dickens went back   to school for two years. He later learned shorthand and became a   freelance court reporter. He started out as a journalist at the   age of twenty and later wrote his first novel, The Pickwick Papers. He   went on to write many other novels, including Tale of Two Cities in   1859.     Tale of Two Cities takes place in France and England during the   troubled times of the French Revolution. There are travels by the   characters between the countries, but most of the action takes place   in Paris, France. The wineshop in Paris is the hot spot for the French   revolutionists, mostly because the wineshop owner, Ernest Defarge, and   his wife, Madame Defarge, are key leaders and officials of the   revolution. Action in the book is scattered out in many places; such   as the Bastille, Tellson's Bank, the home of the Manettes, and   largely, the streets of Paris. These places help to introduce many   characters into the plot.     One of the main characters, Madame Therese Defarge, is a major   antagonist who seeks revenge, being a key revolutionist. She is very   stubborn and unforgiving in her cunning scheme of revenge on the   Evermonde family. Throughout the story, she knits shrouds for the   intended victims of the revolution. Charles Darnay, one of whom Mrs.   Defarge is seeking revenge, is constantly being put on the stand and   wants no part of his own lineage. He is a languid protagonist and has   a tendency to get arrested and must be bailed out several times during   the story. Dr. Alexander Manette, a veteran prisoner of the Bastille   and moderate protagonist, cannot escape the memory of being held and   sometimes relapses to cobbling shoes. Dr. Manette is somewhat   redundant as a character in the novel, but plays a very significant     					    
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