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A Tale of Two Cities

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Book Summary

Charles Dickens Biography

Charles Dickens' Career Highlights

About A Tale of Two Cities

Summary, Analysis, and Original Text by Chapter

Book the First: Chapter 1: The Period
Book the First: Chapter 2: The Mail
Book the First: Chapter 3: The Night Shadows
Book the First: Chapter 4: The Preparation
Book the First: Chapter 5: The Wine-shop
Book the First: Chapter 6: The Shoemaker
Book the Second: Chapter 1: Five Years Later
Book the Second: Chapter 2: A Sight
Book the Second: Chapter 3: A Disappointment
Book the Second: Chapter 4: Congratulatory
Book the Second: Chapter 5: The Jackal
Book the Second: Chapter 6: Hundreds of People
Book the Second: Chapter 7: Monseigneur in Town
Book the Second: Chapter 8: Monseigneur in the Country
Book the Second: Chapter 9: The Gorgon's Head
Book the Second: Chapter 10: Two Promises
Book the Second: Chapter 11: A Companion Picture
Book the Second: Chapter 12: The Fellow of Delicacy
Book the Second: Chapter 13: The Fellow of No Delicacy
Book the Second: Chapter 14: The Honest Tradesman
Book the Second: Chapter 15: Knitting
Book the Second: Chapter 16: Still Knitting
Book the Second: Chapter 17: One Night
Book the Second: Chapter 18: Nine Days
Book the Second: Chapter 19: An Opinion
Book the Second: Chapter 20: A Plea
Book the Second: Chapter 21: Echoing Footsteps
Book the Second: Chapter 22: The Sea Still Rises
Book the Second: Chapter 23: Fire Rises
Book the Second: Chapter 24: Drawn to the Loadstone Rock
Book the Third: Chapter 1: In Secret
Book the Third: Chapter 2: The Grindstone
Book the Third: Chapter 3: The Shadow
Book the Third: Chapter 4: Calm in Storm
Book the Third: Chapter 5: The Wood-Sawyer
Book the Third: Chapter 6: Triumph
Book the Third: Chapter 7: A Knock at the Door
Book the Third: Chapter 8: A Hand at Cards
Book the Third: Chapter 9: The Game Made
Book the Third: Chapter 10: The Substance of the Shadow
Book the Third: Chapter 11: Dusk
Book the Third: Chapter 12: Darkness
Book the Third: Chapter 13: Fifty-two
Book the Third: Chapter 14: The Knitting Done
Book the Third: Chapter 15: The Footsteps Die Out Forever

Character List

Character Map

Character Analysis

Doctor Alexandre Manette
Lucie Manette, later Darnay
Charles Darnay
Sydney Carton
Therese Defarge
Ernest Defarge
Jerry Cruncher

Critical Essays

Women in A Tale of Two Cities
The French Revolution and A Tale of Two Cities

Study and Homework Help

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Film Versions of A Tale of Two Cities
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About A Tale of Two Cities

Scholars describe A Tale of Two Cities as the least Dickensian of Dickens' novels, yet it remains one of Dickens' most widely read books. It was originally published in weekly installments in All the Year Round, from April 30 to November 29, 1859. From the book's inception, it received mixed critical reviews, but succeeded in capturing the imagination of general readers through its swift, exciting story and memorable rendering of the French Revolution.

The idea for A Tale of Two Cities originated in two main sources. Always interested in the interaction between individuals and society, Dickens was particularly intrigued by Thomas Carlyle's history, The French Revolution. He saw similarities between the forces that led to the Revolution and the oppression and unrest occurring in England in his own time. Although he supported the idea of people rising up against tyranny, the violence that characterized the French Revolution troubled him.

Dickens was also drawn to the themes inherent in The Frozen Deep, a play that Wilkie Collins wrote and in which Dickens acted. In the play, two men compete for the same woman, Clara Burnham. When she chooses Frank Aldersley over Richard Wardour, Wardour (played by Dickens) vows revenge upon his rival, even though he doesn't know who his rival is. While on an arctic expedition together, the two men get stranded. Wardour discovers that Aldersley is his rival, but instead of leaving him to die, Wardour overcomes his anger and saves Aldersley's life by carrying him to safety. Collapsing at Clara's feet, Wardour dies from his efforts while Clara weeps over him. The idea of Wardour's heroism and sacrifice strongly affected Dickens, and during the course of the play, as Dickens notes in the preface to A Tale of Two Cities, he "conceived the main idea of this story."


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