It's in chapter 21 of Book the Second. It should be called Echoing Footsteps.
Because of the storming Bastille
Compared to in what? If your asking about A Tale of Two Cities, it is compared to all kinds of water. Floods, storms, raging seas... If you need more help with classic books or A Tale of Two Cities, try sparknotes or cliffnotes. They're both really helpful.
prisoners freed from the Bastille in Paris
Generally it is talking about the conditions of the cities which are disbalanced
Yes of course. You can read about it in A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
It is dark and uncertain.
In book the second's chapter 23 Fire Rises.
The climax is during Darnay's trial when they read Dr. Manette's letter that he wrote in the Bastille
Sydney Carton was the jackal.
The moveable framework within that first chapter refers to the guilliotine.
It was the prison cell Dr. Manette had once occupied before moving to Bastille.
That occurs in Book 2 either chapter 7, or chapter 8 (im not sure which)
it forshadows the people participating in the revolution
Book 2- Chapter 22 The Sea Still Rises
Charles darnay's trial (book two chapter 3)
He is the roadmender. I think He is the one who symbolizes fate, the guillotine and all.
those who spoke up were assumed to be allied with England
The death of the Marquis. The sunset makes it seem like he has blood on himself.
metaphor - because the narrator was jacolation
Dr. Alexandre Manette was Lucie Manette (later Darnay)'s father, who was kept a prisoner in the Bastille for eighteen years.
He was a brilliant doctor who had been a prisoner in Bastille for 18 years. He made shoes as a distraction in prison. He was Lucy's dad; a kind and loving father.
A Tale of Two Cities was created in 1859.
The scene is placed in Soho, at the home of Dr. and Lucie Manette.
Charles Dickens wrote A Tale of Two Cities.
Charles Dickens wrote A Tale of Two Cities.