Gaspard stabbed the Marquis for running over his son with his carriage and killing him.
The Marquis was killed because he ran over and killed a child with his carriage and showed no remorse for his actions. This event triggered the revolutionaries' anger towards the aristocracy and served as a symbol of the unjust and corrupt society in which they lived.
The Marquis was able to have Gaspard imprisoned in "A Tale of Two Cities" after Gaspard sought revenge for the death of his child by killing the Marquis.
Monsieur the Marquis asked his servant Gabelle to remove the body from under his carriage in A Tale of Two Cities.
Marquis Evermonde
no he doesn't get killed
Mr. Lorryβs coach struck and killed a child in the street in A Tale of Two Cities. This event serves as a turning point in the novel, prompting a sense of guilt and responsibility that motivates Mr. Lorry to help Charles Darnay escape from his death sentence in France.
Sydney Carton is killed in Book 3, Chapter 15 of "A Tale of Two Cities".
The man who's child was run over by Marquis's carriage.
nephew
Gaspard.
Charles Darnay is the nephew of the Marquis St. Evremonde in Charles Dickens' novel "A Tale of Two Cities." The Marquis is Charles' uncle, as the Marquis' brother is Charles' father.
In "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens, the Marquis St. Evremonde is a cruel and aristocratic French nobleman who represents the oppressive and frivolous nature of the French aristocracy before the French Revolution. He is portrayed as selfish and indifferent to the suffering of the lower classes, which ultimately leads to his downfall in the story.
The quote "Let them eat grass" is found in Book 2, Chapter 7 of Charles Dickens' novel A Tale of Two Cities. The Marquis St. Evremonde says this line to his carriage driver in reference to the starving peasants he sees on the road.