Tale of Two Cities - A Review by Naval Langa
Tale of Two Cities - A Review by Naval Langa
Tale of Two Cities - A Review by Naval Langa
Dickens. The writer of the review is Mr. Naval Langa, an author from
India. He writes short stories.
It is quite surprising that the master writer like Charles Dickens who
wrote novels like 'Hard Times' and 'Great Expectations' turned on the
historic lane and configured a love story that is passing through the
confusing streets of two great cities: London and Paris.
These were the most turbulent cities of the eighteenth century. He had
woven his novel 'A Tale of Two Cities' narrating these cities.
The couple made their way through strange circumstances. They were
caught in a storm of the revolutionary atmosphere of late eighteenth-
century France. And they would have hardly passed through it without
offering abnormal responses to the situation they were forced to face.
The last phase of feudalism and the haunted the conscience of French
peasants had outrun all the notions of civility and human behaviour.
The movement of peasants for ousting the tyrant rulers partially ended
on the fall of the prison of Bastille. All the prisoners were freed from the
Bastille jail-Dr. Manette, the father of Lucy Manette, one of the prime
characters of the novel being one of them.
Lucy helped her father to come out of the obsession of his jail term. She
took charge of the boat and sailed through the demanding process of
curing his father and developing her relationship with Charles.
A migrant from France and language teacher in London school, Charles
Darney had an aristocratic lineage that he kept undisclosed until the day
of his marriage with Lucy. But his aristocratic virtue of protecting one of
his former loyalists drove him into the storm of France. He was caught;
he was convicted for merely having the aristocratic lineage, and he was
to be executed.
If we want to know how the characters in novels are created and how
they are made looking lively, the reading of the novel A Tale of Two
Cities written by Charles Dickens would be a good guide.
But Dr Manette turns himself into an advocate and takes the tools of a
saviour in his hands for saving his son-in-law from a certain death
penalty.
In the same manner, he narrated the pros and cones of the ongoing
revolution in France. The vivid description of all the characters is such
that if by chance any one of them passes by us, we would immediately
tell that ‘this is Jerry Cruncher (from his unique style of walking) or this is
Lucy (by seeing her serene beauty), or this is Madame Defarge (from the
frozen lava of her anger)’.
The dialogues go with the characters. Mr Lorry and Dr Manette are
professionals. They depict the cultured face of the time. Madame
Defarge is the firebrand lady representing the wrath of the
revolutionaries of contemporary France.
In real life, you would find a replica of every man and woman Dickens
depicted in his novels. Becoming the mother of children having
convincing looks, Dickens had animated a crowd of characters. They are
proud; they are feeble. They are generous; they are greedy.
They are coward; they are bold. Dickens read the life before his eyes
and used it for his creations, hoping that the readers would love them
and honour the same.
While reading Dickens, humour would not fail in helping our strains to
disappear. It would make our mind lighter. Had Dickens not been a writer
and the humorist as he was, he would have become a social activist.
Such were the subjects he chose for his writings.
‘A Tale of Two Cities’, a novel that runs overloaded with the hard facts of
an ongoing revolution, it contains the salient stock of wits and irony.
Though the thematic compulsions restrained Dickens to become outright
humorist; he fully counterbalanced it while caricaturing some of the
characters.