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A Tale of Two Cities Quotations

A Tale of Two Cities (1859) is an historical novel by Charles Dickens. The plot centers on the years leading up to the French Revolution and culminates in the Jacobin Reign of Terror. It tells the story of two men, Charles Darnay and Sydney Carton, who look similar but are very different in traits.

Contents

Book I - Recalled to Life

Chapter I - The Period

Chapter II - The Mail

Chapter III - The Night Shadows

Chapter VI - The Shoemaker

Chapter V - The Wine-shop

Book II The Golden Thread

Chapter V - The Jackal

Chapter IX - The Gorgon's Head

Chapter XXI - Echoing Footsteps

Book III - The Track of a Storm

Chapter V - The Wood-Sawyer

Chapter X - The Substance of the Shadow

Chapter XII - Darkness

Chapter XV - The Footsteps Die Out For Ever

Note: These closing lines bring Dickens' motif of doubles into the story one last time. Dickens' uses the literary device anaphora, which is the repetition of a word or phrase over many lines (doubles), many times throughout A Tale of Two Cities. "It is a far, far better..." is repeated twice in these parting lines, as "It was the ____ of times, it was the epoch of _____," etc. is repeated in the opening lines. This motif of doubles makes up the entire plot of the novel: the two main characters, Darnay and Carton are doubles of each other; London and Paris are the 'two cities' to which the title refers. The very last thoughts attributed to Carton, in their poetic use of repetition, register this faith as a calm and soothing certainty: that both the name of Sydney Carton and of France will be reborn into glory and made "illustrious."

External links

Wikipedia has an article about: A Tale of Two Cities Wikisource has original text related to: A Tale of Two Cities

 

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A Tale of Two Cities (1859) is a novel by Charles Dickens, set in London and Paris before and during the French Revolution.
from: Wikipedia: a tale of two cities,
Tue May 15 20:55:07 2012

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Many readers find the first book of A Tale of Two Cities to be confusing. A record of betting (from the use of a notebook to record what each person has bet).

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... so that the dark night only showed in slight horizontal lines of black, alternating with their broad lines of stone colour. Dickens, Tale of Two Cities


from: Wiktionary: a tale of two cities,
Tue May 15 20:55:08 2012