Charles Dickens
Plot Overview
The
year is 1775, and social ills plague both France and England. Jerry Cruncher,
an odd-job man who works for Tellson’s Bank, stops the Dover mail-coach with an
urgent message for Jarvis Lorry. The message instructs Lorry to wait at Dover
for a young woman, and Lorry responds with the cryptic words, “Recalled to
Life.” At Dover, Lorry is met by Lucie Manette, a young orphan whose father, a
once-eminent doctor whom she supposed dead, has been discovered in France.
Lorry escorts Lucie to Paris, where they meet Defarge, a former servant of
Doctor Manette, who has kept Manette safe in a garret. Driven mad by eighteen
years in the Bastille, Manette spends all of his time making shoes, a hobby he
learned while in prison. Lorry assures Lucie that her love and devotion can
recall her father to life, and indeed they do.
The year is now 1780. Charles Darnay stands
accused of treason against the English crown. A bombastic lawyer named Stryver
pleads Darnay’s case, but it is not until his drunk, good-for-nothing
colleague, Sydney Carton, assists him that the court acquits Darnay. Carton
clinches his argument by pointing out that he himself bears an uncanny
resemblance to the defendant, which undermines the prosecution’s case for
unmistakably identifying Darnay as the spy the authorities spotted. Lucie and
Doctor Manette watched the court proceedings, and that night, Carton escorts
Darnay to a tavern and asks how it feels to receive the sympathy of a woman
like Lucie. Carton despises and resents Darnay because he reminds him of all
that he himself has given up and might have been.
In France, the cruel Marquis Evrémonde runs down
a plebian child with his carriage. Manifesting an attitude typical of the
aristocracy in regard to the poor at that time, the Marquis shows no regret,
but instead curses the peasantry and hurries home to his chateau, where he
awaits the arrival of his nephew, Darnay, from England. Arriving later that
night, Darnay curses his uncle and the French aristocracy for its abominable
treatment of the people. He renounces his identity as an Evrémonde and announces
his intention to return to England. That night, the Marquis is murdered; the
murderer has left a note signed with the nickname adopted by French
revolutionaries: “Jacques.”
A year passes, and Darnay asks Manette for
permission to marry Lucie. He says that, if Lucie accepts, he will reveal his
true identity to Manette. Carton, meanwhile, also pledges his love to Lucie,
admitting that, though his life is worthless, she has helped him dream of a
better, more valuable existence. On the streets of London, Jerry Cruncher gets
swept up in the funeral procession for a spy named Roger Cly. Later that night,
he demonstrates his talents as a “Resurrection-Man,” sneaking into the cemetery
to steal and sell Cly’s body. In Paris, meanwhile, another English spy known as
John Barsad drops into Defarge’s wine shop. Barsad hopes to turn up evidence
concerning the mounting revolution, which is still in its covert stages. Madame
Defarge sits in the shop knitting a secret registry of those whom the
revolution seeks to execute. Back in London, Darnay, on the morning of his
wedding, keeps his promise to Manette; he reveals his true identity and, that
night, Manette relapses into his old prison habit of making shoes. After nine
days, Manette regains his presence of mind, and soon joins the newlyweds on
their honeymoon. Upon Darnay’s return, Carton pays him a visit and asks for his
friendship. Darnay assures Carton that he is always welcome in their home.
The year is now 1789. The peasants in Paris storm
the Bastille and the French Revolution begins. The revolutionaries murder
aristocrats in the streets, and Gabelle, a man charged with the maintenance of
the Evrémonde estate, is imprisoned. Three years later, he writes to Darnay,
asking to be rescued. Despite the threat of great danger to his person, Darnay
departs immediately for France.
As soon as Darnay arrives in Paris, the French
revolutionaries arrest him as an emigrant. Lucie and Manette make their way to
Paris in hopes of saving him. Darnay remains in prison for a year and three
months before receiving a trial. In order to help free him, Manette uses his
considerable influence with the revolutionaries, who sympathize with him for
having served time in the Bastille. Darnay receives an acquittal, but that same
night he is arrested again. The charges, this time, come from Defarge and his
vengeful wife. Carton arrives in Paris with a plan to rescue Darnay and obtains
the help of John Barsad, who turns out to be Solomon Pross, the long-lost
brother of Miss Pross, Lucie’s loyal servant.
At Darnay’s trial, Defarge
produces a letter that he discovered in Manette’s old jail cell in the
Bastille. The letter explains the cause of Manette’s imprisonment. Years ago,
the brothers Evrémonde (Darnay’s father and uncle) enlisted Manette’s medical
assistance. They asked him to tend to a woman, whom one of the brothers had
raped, and her brother, whom the same brother had stabbed fatally. Fearing that
Manette might report their misdeeds, the Evrémondes had him arrested. Upon
hearing this story, the jury condemns Darnay for the crimes of his ancestors
and sentences him to die within twenty-four hours. That night, at the Defarge’s
wine shop, Carton overhears Madame Defarge plotting to have Lucie and her
daughter (also Darnay’s daughter) executed as well; Madame Defarge, it turns
out, is the surviving sibling of the man and woman killed by the Evrémondes.
Carton arranges for the Manettes’ immediate departure from France. He then
visits Darnay in prison, tricks him into changing clothes with him, and, after
dictating a letter of explanation, drugs his friend unconscious. Barsad carries
Darnay, now disguised as Carton, to an awaiting coach, while Carton, disguised
as Darnay, awaits execution. As Darnay, Lucie, their child, and Dr. Manette
speed away from Paris, Madame Defarge arrives at Lucie’s apartment, hoping to
arrest her. There she finds the supremely protective Miss Pross. A scuffle
ensues, and Madame Defarge dies by the bullet of her own gun. Sydney Carton
meets his death at the guillotine, and the narrator confidently asserts that
Carton dies with the knowledge that he has finally imbued his life with
meaning.
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