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  1. THE NEW AMERICAN, INC. Published in the year 1960 354
  2. PAGES Guillermo Chiu Social Studies Period / G Summary of
  3. Novel A Tale of Two Cities is written by Charles Dickens
  4. and it takes place in France and England during the troubled
  5. times of the French Revolution. The characters travels to both
  6. country but most of the story happens in Paris, France. The
  7. hot spot of the French revolutionists, mostly takes place in a
  8. wineshop in Paris, because the wineshop owner is Ernest
  9. Defarge and his wife, Madame Defarge are the key leaders
  10. and officials of the revolution. The action in the book takes
  11. place in many parts of Paris, such as the Bastille, Tellson´s
  12. Bank, the home of the Manettes and largely in the streets of
  13. Paris. This places help introduce many characters into the
  14. story. One of the main characters, Madame Theresa Defrage,
  15. is a major antagonist who seeks revenge. She is a very tense
  16. and unforgiving woman who seeks revenge on the
  17. Evermonde family. Through out the story, she weave shrouds
  18. for the intended victims of the revolution. Charles Darnay, one
  19. of whom Mrs. Defarge is seeking revenge, is constantly being
  20. put on the stand and wants no part of his own lineage. He is
  21. languid protagonist and has a tendency to get arrested and
  22. must be bailed out several times during the story. Dr.
  23. Alexander Manette, a veteran prisoner of the Bastille and
  24. moderate protagonist, cannot escape the memory of being
  25. held and sometimes fall back to cobbling shoes, he plays a
  26. very significant part in the story. His daughter , Lucie Manette,
  27. a positive protagonist, is loved by many and marries Charles
  28. Darnay. She is a quiet, emotional person and discriminating
  29. protagonist in the story. One who never forgot the love of
  30. Lucie, was Sydney Carton, who starts off as a frustrated,
  31. immature alcoholic, but in the end, he made the ultimate
  32. sacrifice for a good friend. This are the characters that gives
  33. the interesting and dramatic plot to the story. Carton was
  34. deeply in love with Lucie and is always telling her that he
  35. loves her so much that he would do anything for her but Lucie
  36. ends up marring Darnay, a few days after their marriage when
  37. they were on their honeymoon, Dr. Manette has a fall back
  38. and cobbles shoes for nine straight days. France´s citizens
  39. arm themselves for a revolutoin led by the Defarges and
  40. starts the revolution by riding to Bastille. Shortly before they
  41. start the revolution, the Marquis runs over a child in the street
  42. of Paris. The child´s father, Gaspard who is part of the
  43. revolution murders Marquis. Three years later Darnay is
  44. called back to Paris to help his friend Gabelle, when Darnay
  45. was walking on the street of Paris he got arrested for being
  46. an enemy of the country. Lucie and her father Dr. Manette
  47. goes to Paris to see if they can be of any help to Darnay.
  48. Darnay is release from prison but the same day he is
  49. re-arrested on charges set forth by the Defrages and one
  50. other unknown person. The next day Darnay sent to trial and
  51. is convicted and sentence to death. Here is when the heroe
  52. comes and with spy contacts finds out in which prison he is
  53. encarcelated, he goes and drugs Darnay, while Darnay was
  54. drug, Carton switches place with Darnay. Lucie, Charles
  55. Darnay and their daughter leaves Paris safely while Sydney
  56. Carton makes his final sacrifice and is taking to the guillotine
  57. in place of Darnay. Summary of the Standard Historical
  58. Source The French Revolution is a cataclysmic political and
  59. social upheaval, extending from 1789 to1799. The revolution
  60. resulted, among other things, in the overthrow of the Bourdon
  61. monarchy in France and in the establishment of the First
  62. Republic. It was generated by a vast complex of causes, the
  63. most important of which were the inability of the ruling classes
  64. of nobility, divine, and bourgeoisie to come to grips with the
  65. problems of the state, the indecisive nature of the monarch,
  66. extortionate taxation of the peasantry. Another cause was the
  67. accession of Louis XVI in 1774 which lasted for a century, the
  68. French government had undergone periodic economic crises,
  69. resulting from the long wars waged during the reign of Louis
  70. XIV. The rebellion continued the challenge of royal decrees
  71. and the mutinous mood of the royal army forced the king to
  72. capitulate. On June 27 he ordered the refractory nobility and
  73. clergy to join the unicameral legislature, which then
  74. designated itself the National Constituent Assembly. Yielding
  75. to pressure from the queen and the d´Artois. At the same time,
  76. Necker, the popular apostle of a regenerated france, was
  77. again dismissed from the government. The people of Paris
  78. reacted to these provocative acts with open insurrection.
  79. Rioting began on July 12, and on July 14 the Bastille, a royal
  80. prison that symbolized the despotism of the Bourdons, was
  81. stormed and captured. Ever since the Parisian outburst,
  82. violence, occasional local disturbances and peasant uprisings
  83. against oppressive nobles occurred in many parts of france,
  84. alarming the propertied bourgeoisie, prominent reactionaries,
  85. the first of the so called émigrés, fled the country. The
  86. Parisian bourgeoisie, fearful that the lower classes of the city
  87. would take further advantage of the collapse of the old
  88. administrative machine and resort again to direct action,
  89. hastily established a provisional local government and
  90. organized a people´s militia, officially designated the National
  91. Guard. The National Guard was placed under the command
  92. of the marquis de Lafayette,a hero of the American
  93. Revolution. Unable to stem the rising tide of revolt, Louis XVI
  94. withdrew his loyal troops. He recalled Necker, and then
  95. formally legalized the measures that had been talken by the
  96. provisional authorities. Later in July, an invading army of
  97. émigrés was defeated in Brittany. The National Convention
  98. then quickly completed the draft of a new constitution.
  99. Formally approved on August 22, 1795, the new basic law of
  100. France vested executive authority in a Directory. Comparison
  101. of Two Sources There wasn´t a lot of differences on the two
  102. sources, they are both based on the french revolution so their
  103. isn´t a lot to say about their differences but a little more to
  104. their similarities, for example of novel and historical source
  105. had a cause for the revolution, but the novel might be set on a
  106. few people in particular, on the other hand the real historical
  107. happenings affected the whole state and was a million times
  108. more complex than how the novel described it. I think that the
  109. events that occurred in the novel might have some real
  110. happenings that occurred in the Real french revolution, but
  111. not so big, I mean maybe families like Lucie´s were separated
  112. and many people died of course but I do not think that any
  113. man or woman sacrifice his or her life for some one the way
  114. that Sydney Carton did for Charles Darnay. Both novel and
  115. real event were very similar in some points but the real event I
  116. don´t think was so dramatic as the novel, it´s just too much
  117. drama for a real event that had happen in real life. Your
  118. Opinion of the Historical Novel My personal opinion about A
  119. tale of two cities written by Charles Dickens is that the novel
  120. is a very long and detailed historical novel. It is my opinion
  121. that the major strength of this book was the suspense and
  122. drama of it involved to keep the reader hooked and not
  123. putting the book down for one single second. There are
  124. always occasion that keep the reader asking themselves
  125. what´s going to happen now? For example Will Dr. Manette
  126. ever be himself again? and so on. A major weakness of this
  127. novel, is that the fact that it was so very long and it has a
  128. pretty advances vocabulary for me. A Tale of two cities uses
  129. words such as capricious or coquette and even
  130. tergiversation what ever that means, the good side of these
  131. words is that if you don´t know them, you would probibly
  132. check the word out in a dictionary for the meaning of it and b
  133. doing this it will expand your knowledge of your vocabulary,
  134. but in other words this piece of work by Charles Dickens is a
  135. good book to read, however I would not recommended to
  136. people with english as their second language.
  137. <br><br>
  138. Words: 1406