Dickens describes the poor men in the streets of Paris as "scarecrows" to emphasize their emaciated and tattered appearance, highlighting their poverty and desperation. The comparison also symbolizes how society neglects or overlooks their suffering, treating them as mere objects rather than individuals deserving of empathy and help.
Back Streets of Paris was created in 1940.
The duration of Back Streets of Paris is 1.67 hours.
The term 'Paris streets' is two nouns. The word 'Paris' is a proper noun, the name of a specific place. The word 'streets' is a common noun, a general word for any streets in Paris; a word for things.A verb is a word for an action or a state of being. Examples:I was on the Paris streets. (the verb 'was' is the state of being there)I walked the Paris streets. (the verb 'walked' is an action)
The cast of Streets of Paris - 1969 includes: Maxine DeVille France as French Wife
London and Paris
Yes, I was in Paris yesterday and drank a beer on the streets. I wasn't a hundred pourcent sure that I could, but when I walked in front of a policeman, I was pretty sure it was ok!
Paris and London
A Tale of Two Cities.
The French Peasants.
The gendarme chased a crimal through the streets of Paris.
Indifference.
In his book "A Tale of Two Cities," Charles Dickens is referring to London and Paris during the time of the French Revolution. The two cities are used as contrasting symbols of the social and political upheaval of the era.