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Tale Of Two Cities Charictarization Essay Research (стр. 2 из 2)

(ironically, in Dr. Manette’s name) needed to condemn him. Defarge

stops just short of denouncing Dr. Manette and Lucie, too, but there

are hints from Madame and friends that he’d better start toeing the

line.

Dickens leaves us with the thought that, finally, Defarge is

controlled by a force more powerful than politics, or even his wife.

In Sydney Carton’s last vision, Defarge and Madame Defarge perish by

the guillotine. Is it fate, irony, or historic inevitability that

kills them? You decide.

-MISS PROSS

Eccentric, mannish-looking Miss Pross is a type of character familiar

to readers of Dickens’ novels. Beneath her wild red hair and

outrageous bonnet, she’s as good as gold, a fiercely loyal servant.

Dickens places Miss Pross in the plot by means of her long-lost

brother. Solomon Pross is revealed to be John Barsad, Old Bailey spy

and “sheep of the prisons.”

Miss Pross’ two defining characteristics are her devotion to Lucie

and Solomon, and her stalwart Britishness. When Madame Defarge

marches in, armed, to execute Lucie and her family, Miss Pross

understands the Frenchwoman’s intent–but not a word she says. Miss

Pross has refused to learn French.

Miss Pross’ blind patriotism and devotion work to her advantage.

She’s empowered by love. Mistaking Miss Pross’ tears of resolve for

weakness, Madame Defarge moves toward a closed door, and in a heated

struggle is shot by her own pistol. A Tale of Two Cities isn’t

markedly anti-France or pro-England, but Miss Pross’ victory may

strike you as a victory for her country, too.

-STRYVER

Dickens dislikes Stryver. You may be hard put to find a single

lovable feature in this “shouldering” lawyer, who has been “driving

and living” ever since his school days with Sydney Carton. Yet the

ambitious Stryver–his name a neat summing up of the man–is making

his way in the world. With little talent for law, he pays the doomed

but brilliant Carton to do his work for him. For the Stryvers of

society, ambition and unscrupulousness count far more than skill.

Dickens’ Stryver is one of the new men of industrialized Victorian

England. Abhorring his progress in real life, Dickens renders him

the butt of jokes and scorn in the novel: Stryver’s three adopted

sons, though not of his flesh and blood, seem tainted by the mere

connection.

Dickens’ portrayal of Stryver as the man we love to hate seems rather

one-sided. Does this make him a more memorable creation, or of

limited interest? Notice how sharply Stryver is drawn in individual

scenes–during his midnight work sessions with Carton, and in his

conferences with Lorry about marrying Lucie. But once Lucie is

married, and Darnay returns to France, Stryver drops out of the

story. His role as the object of Dickens’ satire is at an end.

-JERRY CRUNCHER

For some readers, spiky-haired Jerry Cruncher supplies an element of

humor in an otherwise serious novel. Other readers claim that the

Cockney odd-job man who beats his wife for “flopping” (praying) isn’t

a particularly funny fellow. Cruncher’s after hours work is digging

up newly buried bodies and selling them to surgeons, which may not

seem a subject for comedy. But it does contribute, in two important

ways, to A Tale’s development.

Cruncher’s grave robbing graphically illustrates the theme of

resurrection: he literally raises people from the dead. (Victorian

grave robbers were in fact nicknamed “resurrection men.”)

One of the plot’s biggest surprises hinges on Cruncher’s failed

attempt to unearth the body of Roger Cly, the spy who testified with

John Barsad against Charles Darnay. In France, years after his

graveyard expedition, Cruncher discloses that Cly’s coffin contained

only stones and dirt. This information enables Sydney Carton to

force Barsad, Cly’s partner, into a plot to save Charles Darnay’s

life.

As for Cruncher’s moral character, a brush with Revolutionary terror

reforms him. He promises to make amends for his former “honest

trade” by turning undertaker, burying the dead instead of raising

them. In the last, tense pages of the novel, Cruncher’s vow, “never

no more will I interfere with Mrs. Cruncher’s flopping,” finally

strikes a humorous chord. It’s darkly comic relief.

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