tale of two cities-foreshadow
Title: tale of two cities-foreshadow
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 845 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
tale of two cities-foreshadow
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 845 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
In Charles Dickens?, Tale of Two Cities, the author repeatedly foreshadows the impending revolution. In Chapter Five of Book One, Dickens includes the breaking of a wine cask to show a large, impoverished crowd gathered in a united cause. Later, we find find Madame Defarge symbolically knitting, what we come to find out to be, the death warrants of the St. Evremonde family. Also, after Marquis is murdered for killing the small child with his
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foreshadowing the way Charles Darnay, and many others, would be imprisoned and sentenced to death at the revolutionaries? trials. In addition to that, the author used the instance of the wine cask breaking open in the street to emphasizes how poverty-stricken the common people of France were and how tumultuous a crowd of people united around a common cause can be. Charles Dickens used foreshadowing to great effect in his novel Tale of Two Cities.