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A Tale of Two Cities -
Title: A Tale of Two Cities -
Category: Literature / Novels
Details: Words: 1456 | Pages: 6.2 (approximately 235 words/page)
A Tale of Two Cities -
The French Revolution, in the novel A Tale of Two Cities written by Charles Dickens, is described throughout the novel as a “force of nature”; the revolution came progressively but indubitably sweeping over an entire region with cries of passion, as like rain, and hazardous conditions brought forth from it, as like a storm. This theme weaves itself into the novel’s setting and time period from the initiation of the oppression of the poor
showed first 75 words of 1456 total
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showed last 75 words of 1456 total
mob-mentality, demonstrating the violence and brutality endured by the innocent people, and comprehending how the oppressed can quickly become the oppressors. In A Tale of Two Cities the revolution is understood as something that was inescapable; it was a storm waiting to be unleash, and as it did so, it changed the history of France. Like a hurricane, the strength and “the evil of this … [will] gradually make expiation for itself and wear out.” (Dickens 367)
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