The shoe maker
The early rumblings of the French Revolution are
echoing across the English Channel when, in Paris, an old man waits in an attic
for his first meeting with a daughter whom he has not seen since she was a
baby. With the aid of Mr. Jarvis Lorry, an agent for the Franco-British banking
house of Tellson & Co., the lovely Lucie Manette is brought to Paris to be
reunited with her father, who was imprisoned for eighteen years in the
Bastille. Above the wineshop of Madame and Monsieur Defarge, Dr. Manette is kept
secretly until his rescuers can take him safely back to England. Day after day,
Madame Defarge sits outside her wineshop, knitting into a long scarf strange
symbols that will later spell out a death list of hated aristocrats and enemies
of the Revolution.
Five years later, Lucie sits beside her father in
the courtroom of the Old Bailey, where Charles Darnay, a teacher of languages,
is on trial for treasonable activities that involve his passing between France
and England on secret business. A man named John Barsad brings charges against
him. Lucie and her father testify that they met Darnay on the boat when they
traveled from France five years earlier. The prisoner was saved when Mr.
Stryver, the prisoner’s counsel, pointed across the courtroom to another man,
Sydney Carton, who so resembled the prisoner that legal identification of
Darnay was shaken and Mr. Stryver was able to secure an acquittal for the
prisoner. Carton’s relationship to Stryver is that of the jackal to the lion;
the alcoholic, aimless Carton writes the cases that Stryver pleads in court.
Lucie and her father live in a small tenement under
the care of their maid, Miss Pross, and their kindly friend, Mr. Lorry. Jerry
Cruncher, the porter at Tellson & Co. and a secret resurrectionist, is
often helpful. Darnay and Carton become frequent callers in the Manette
household, after the trial that brought them together.
In France, the fury of the people grows. Monseigneur
the Marquis St. Evrémonde is driving in his carriage through the countryside
when he carelessly kills a child of a peasant named Gaspard. The nobleman
returns to his castle to meet his nephew, Charles Darnay, who is visiting from
England. Darnay’s views differ from those of his uncle. Darnay knows that his
family committed grave injustices, and he begs his uncle to make amends.
Monseigneur the Marquis haughtily refuses. That night, the marquis is murdered
in his bed.
Darnay returns to England to seek Dr. Manette’s
permission to court Lucie. In order to construct a bond of complete honesty,
Darnay attempts to tell the doctor his true French name, but Manette fearfully
asks him to wait until the morning of his marriage before revealing it. Carton
also approaches Lucie with a proposal of marriage. When Lucie refuses, Carton
asks her always to remember that there is a man who will give his own life to
keep a life she loves beside her.
In France, Madame Defarge knits the story of the
hated St. Evrémondes into her scarf. Gaspard was hanged for the assassination
of the marquis; Monseigneur’s house must be destroyed. Barsad, the spy, brings
news that Lucie will marry Darnay, the nephew of the marquis. This news
disturbs Defarge, for Dr. Manette, a former prisoner of the Bastille, holds a
special honor in the eyes of the revolutionists.
Lucie and Darnay are married. Carton becomes a loyal
friend of the family. Time passes, and tiny Lucie arrives. When the child is
six years old, in the year 1789, the French people storm the Bastille. At the
Bastille, Defarge goes to the cell where Dr. Manette was a prisoner and
extracts some papers hidden behind a stone in the wall.
One day, while Darnay is talking to Mr. Lorry at
Tellson & Co., a letter addressed to the Marquis St. Evrémonde is placed on
Mr. Lorry’s desk. Darnay offers to deliver it to the proper person. When he is
alone, he reads the letter. It is from an old family servant who is imprisoned
by the revolutionists. He begs the Marquis St. Evrémonde to save his life.
Darnay realizes that he must go to Paris. Only Dr. Manette knows of Darnay’s
family name, and the doctor is sworn to secrecy.
Darnay and Mr. Lorry go to Paris, the latter to look
after the French branch of Tellson & Co. Shortly after his arrival, Darnay
is seized as an undesirable immigrant after Defarge orders his arrest. Mr.
Lorry is considerably upset when Lucie and Dr. Manette suddenly arrive in
Paris. Some of the doctor’s friends inform him of Darnay’s arrest. The old man
feels that his own imprisonment in the Bastille will win the sympathy of the
revolutionists and enable him to save his son-in-law.
After fifteen months of waiting, Darnay is brought
to trial. Because he is able to prove himself innocent of harming the French
people, he is freed but forbidden to leave France. A short time later, he is
again arrested, denounced by Defarge and one other person whose name the
officer refuses to disclose.
While shopping one day in the Paris market, Miss
Pross and Jerry Cruncher, who are in Paris with Lucie and Mr. Lorry, meet a man
who causes Miss Pross to scream in amazement and Jerry to stare in silent
astonishment. The man is Solomon, Miss Pross’s lost brother. Jerry remembers
him as Barsad, the man who was a spy-witness at the Old Bailey. Carton arrives
on the scene at that moment, and he is able to force Barsad to come with him to
the office of Tellson & Co. for a private conference. Barsad fears
detection of his duplicity, for he is now an employee of the Republican French
Government. Carton and Jerry threaten to expose him as a former spy for the
English government, the enemy of France. Carton makes a deal with Barsad.
When Darnay is once more brought before the
tribunal, Defarge testifies against him and names Dr. Manette as the other
accuser. Defarge produces the papers that he found in Dr. Manette’s cell in the
Bastille. Therein the doctor wrote the story of his arrest and imprisonment
because he learned of a secret crime committed by a St. Evrémonde against a
woman of humble birth and her young brother. His account is enough to convict
Darnay. Sentenced for the crimes of his ancestors, Darnay, the young St.
Evrémonde, is condemned by the tribunal to the guillotine.
Carton now begins to visit the Defarge wineshop,
where he learns that Madame Defarge is the sister of the woman ruined by St.
Evrémonde years before. With the help of the false Barsad, he gains admittance
to the prison where Darnay was taken. There he drugs the prisoner and, still
aided by the cowed Barsad, has him carried from the cell, himself remaining
behind. The resemblance between the two will allow him to pass as Darnay and
prevent discovery of the aristocrat’s escape.
Madame Defarge goes to the lodgings of Lucie and Dr. Manette to denounce them. Only Miss Pross is there; the others, including Darnay, are already on their way to safety. To keep Madame Defarge from learning of their escape, Miss Pross struggles with the furious woman when she demands admittance to Lucie’s apartment. Madame Defarge is killed when her pistol goes off. Miss Pross is deaf for the rest of her life. Lucie and Darnay return safely to England. Carton dies at the guillotine, giving his own life for the happiness of those he loved.
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