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A Tale of Two Cities Summary How It All Goes Down It s 1775. Trouble is a-brewin in the French countryside.

Apparently, the folks out there don t like to be starved and taxed to death. Who would ve guessed it, eh? As our novel starts, a very businessman-like British gentleman makes his way int o the heart of Paris. He s on a very unsettling mission. In fact, it s almost enough to make a businessman cry. You see, eighteen years ago, a French doctor was imp risoned without any warning (or any trial). He s been locked up in the worst priso n of all prisons, the Bastille. After almost two decades, he was released again without any explanation and he s currently staying with an old servant of his, Ern st Defarge. Today, Mr. Lorry (that s our British businessman) is on a mission to t he French doctor back to England, where he can live in peace with his daughter. Dr. Manette may be free, but he s still a broken man. He spends most of his time c obbling together shoes and pacing up and down in his dark room. Too accustomed t o the space of a prison to understand that he can actually leave his room, Dr. M anette seems doomed to live a pitiful life. Fortunately for Dr. Manette (and for Mr. Lorry, now that we think about it), he happens to have the World s Perfect Daughter. Lucie, the child he left eighteen ye ars ago, is now a grown-up, smiling, blond, perfect ray of sunshine. Everything she touches seems to turn to gold. Vomit if you d like, but Lucie is indeed perfec t. And she ll need every ounce of that perfection to restore her father back to he alth. Of course, she does manage to bring Dr. Manette back into the everyday world. We never doubted her for a second. Within the space of five years (that s 1780, for those of you who are counting), Dr. Manette is a new man. He s a practicing doctor again; he and Lucie live in a small house in Soho. They don t have much money (Dr . Manette s cash was all seized in France), but Lucie manages to shine her rays of wonderfulness over their lives. In other words, they re pretty happy. And they ve a dopted Mr. Lorry as a sort of drop-in uncle. As we pick up the story in 1780, Dr. Manette and Lucie have been called as witne sses in a treason case. Apparently, a young man named Charles Darnay is accused of providing classified information to the French government. English trials at the time resemble smoke-and-mirror tricks: Dickens takes great delight in mockin g the "esteemed" members of the court. Thanks to Lucie s compassionate testimony a nd some quick work by a man who looks strangely like Charles Darnay, however, ou r man Charles is off the hook. A free man, Charles Darnay immediately realizes just how perfect our perfect Luc ie actually is. He sets up shop in the Manette house, coming to visit almost eve ry day. The Charles look-alike, a disreputable (but, let s face it, really likable ) guy called Sydney Carton, also takes a liking to Lucie. If Charles is shiny an d good and perfect, Sydney is not any of those things. He also likes to beat hims elf up a lot. (In fact, we re thinking that he could really use one of those twelv e-step esteem boosting programs.) Sydney loves Lucie with all his heart, but he s convinced that he could never dese rve her. What does he do? Well, he tells her precisely why she could never love him. Surprise, surprise: she agrees. She d like to help him be a better person, bu t he would rather wallow in his misery. After all, wallowing sounds like so much fun, doesn t it? Wallow, wallow, wallow. That s Sydney in a nutshell. Charles, meanwhile, fares a little bit better. He marries Lucie. On the day of h is wedding, he tells Dr. Manette a secret: he s actually a French nobleman in disg

uise. A very particular French nobleman, as a matter of fact: the Marquis Evrmond e. Because everything in a Dickens novel has to fit into a neat pattern, it s no r eal surprise that the Evrmondes were the evil brothers who locked Dr. Manette up in the first place. The good doctor is a bit shocked, of course, but he eventual ly realizes that Charles is nothing like his father or his uncle (the evil Evrmon des brothers). Dr. Manette is willing to love Charles for the man he is, not the family he left behind. Things are going swimmingly in England. Charles moves in with the Manettes, he m akes a decent wage as a tutor, and Dr. Manette seems to be as happy as ever. But wait, wasn t this a tale of two cities? What happened to the other city? OK, you got us. While everything s coming up roses in London, everything s coming up dead in Paris. We only wish we were kidding. People are starving, the noblemen run over little children with their carriages, and everyone is pretty unhappy. I n fact, they re so unhappy that they re beginning to band together as "citizens" of a new republic. Right now, Ernst Defarge and his wife are at the center of a rev olutionary group. We can tell that they re revolutionary because they re super-secre t. And they also call each other "Jacques." That s "Jack" in French. In the village of the Evrmondes, the Marquis has been stabbed in the night. Gasp! The government hangs the killer, but tensions don t ever really settle down. Fina lly, the steward of the Evrmonde estate sends a desperate letter to the new Marqu is: because folks hated the old Marquis so much, they re now throwing the steward into prison. A bunch of fluke accidents conspire to make sure that Charles gets the letter. H e s the Marquis, remember? Even though he s thrown off his old title and his old lan ds entirely, he can t help but feel responsible for the fate of this steward. With out telling his wife or his father-in-law anything about what s been going on, he secretly sets off for France. Unfortunately for Charles, he picked a bad time for a summer vacation. By the ti me he arrives on the shores of France, the revolutionaries have overturned the c ountry. The King is about to be beheaded. The Queen soon follows suit. Murder an d vengeance and mob mentality are all boiling over. Immediately detained, Charle s soon realizes that he s made a big, big mistake. By the time he reaches Paris, h e s become a prisoner. New laws dictate that he s going to be executed by La Guillot ine. Fortunately, Dr. Manette hears about his fate. With Lucie in tow, he rushes to P aris. It turns out that he s something of a celebrity there: anybody who was false ly arrested under the aristocratic rule of old is now revered as one of the hero es of the new Republic. The doctor shows up at Charles's trial and wows the judg es with his heroic plea to save his son-in-law. Everything seems happy again. Sure, it s the middle of the French Revolution, but the Manettes and Charles are in the clear. Or at least, that s how it seems for a few hours. All too quickly, however, Charles is arrested again. This time, the D efarges have accused him of being a member of the nobility and a stain on the co untry s name. Frantic, Doctor Manette tries to intervene. The court case for Charles s second tr ial goes very differently from the first one, though. Ernst Defarge produces a l etter, written by Dr. Manette himself, which condemns Charles to death. Wait a second! Dr. Manette? Impossible! Well, not exactly. Long ago, Dr. Manette scribbled down the history of his own imprisonment and secreted it in a wall of the Bastille. The history tells a sordid tale of rape and murder crimes committ ed by Charles s father and brother. Incensed, the jury of French revolutionary "ci

tizens" decides that Charles should pay for the crimes of his father. Before he can be executed, however, Sydney Carton comes to the rescue. A few goo d tricks and a couple of disguises later, Charles is a free man. He and his fami ly head back to England in (relative) safety. Sydney, however, doesn t fare so wel l. He takes Charles s place in prison and dies on the guillotine. Crazy, huh? The novel, however, thinks that his sacrifice is pretty heroic. And we ve got to say, we agree.

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