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Thursday, January 17, 2019

Dickens’ Views on the French Revolution

demon views on The French Revolution Revolutions substantiate occurred since the first oppressed people got fed up with a peremptory leader. It has been the cry of the downtrodden since the beginning of time. Revolution is a word that symbolizes hope for a better future. It can be a dangerous thing because if non successful life for the common people might get worsened than it origin exclusivelyy was. Even if successful the new leaders can be as bad as those preceding. Dickens captures the essence of a transition gone bad in his sweet A yarn Of cardinal Cities.The intent of this short essay is to discuss and analyze Dickens treatment of the thought of revolution in A account of Two Cities. It allow fire to show you how Dickens changes his mind midway through the novel almost whether or not the revolutionaries in France are better than their aristocratic predecessors. When the novel first journeyed into France, it was to a poor district in Paris by the name of St. Antonie . A barrel of wine had fallen from the back of a cart in front of a small wine lead astray owned by a monsieur Defarge. People from all around rush to see what had happened.The people were so poor that the very prospect to discombobulate wine, even off the dirty street was too tempting to realize up. They drank out of cupped hands and even went as far as to quench wine from a rag into an infants mouth. Their hands were stained red by the wine. It is a pitiful and prophetic scene. It is prophetic in that later these equivalent poor peasants whose hands are stained red with wine will have them stained red with the store of the nobility, and the streets will run with the blood of a revolution as it does with the wine.The revolution in France is necessary for the inviolable of the people and Dickens seems to be responsibility behind the peasants. His views are explicit most clearly when he shows how uncaring the aristocrats were to the plight of the common people. A specific p oint of this is when he had the Marque de Evremonde say, after running all over a small child, It is extraordinary that you people cannot take care of yourselves or your children How do I know what injury you have through with(p) my horses. (A Tale of Two Cities 112) Judging from how the aristocrat is portrayed, Dickens continues to support he peasants right up to the beginning of the revolution. Dickens sympathies shifts rather quickly from the mob of French nationalist revolutionaries to the plight of the aristocrats and their families. In the time before the revolution any courtly could have any commoner thrown in jail without power or a trial, just on a suspicion, as was done to Dr. Manette by the Evremonde brothers. This did change after the revolution, when any person at all could be thrown in jail with a good chance of execution by La Guillotine for any reason at all.The aristocrats in particular had no chance at all, as is shown by this quote, Let him be, he will be jud ged in Paris. The response creation Judged, ay , and condemned as a traitor. (A Tale of Two Cities 259) Dickens has no bang for the mob either. While describing their wild dancing and singing and murder in the streets, he does not speak as if he holds them in high up regard. In one case in particular, he seems to really despise their actions and speaks out against them through the rational voice of the narrator, There were no less than five hundred people, and they were dancing like five thousand demons. (A Tale of Two Cities 290) In closing, I reiterate the thesis statement, that things did not better and in some cases got worse than before. In the long run it was beat out for the French people as a whole but Dickens is right when he implies that the French Revolutionary mob was composed in the main of animals like Madame Defarge whose interests lay with revenge rather than the improvement as a whole of their society. While it lasted, the French Revolution was one of the m ost cruel periods in the history of the world.

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