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Charles Danay's Hunger In Charles Dickens A Tale Of Two Cities

329 Words2 Pages
“The wine was red, and had stained the ground of the narrow street”. This insertion opens the novel examination of Paris and acts as a potent depiction of the peasant’s hunger. Charles Dickens, in the early twentieth century novel, A Tale of Two Cities, shows the thirst people have for justice and peace in their misery. Dickens uses character details to portray the many egos and different personalities in the novel. In the opening plot of the novel Charles Danay comes off as a well-educated man. Most people would consider Danay as a very arrogant person. Danay’s attitude “represents the arrogance and brutality that leads to the violent reaction of those who felt oppressed and demanded by the nobility” (Griffith). Dickens vividly paints
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