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There are also many good sites on Charles Dickens and his works, one of them being the Wikipedia articles.
The shoemaker identifies himself as Alexandre Manette from Beauvais when he is asked his name in "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens.
He was a shoemaker while he was in prison
Chapter 17 of "A Tale of Two Cities" takes place in the village of Saint Antoine, the impoverished and revolutionary neighborhood of Paris. It is where the Defarges, key characters in the novel, own a wine shop.
Charles Darnay and Lucie Manette.
Paris and London.
Generally it is talking about the conditions of the cities which are disbalanced
It's in chapter 21 of Book the Second. It should be called Echoing Footsteps.
Because A Tale of Two Cities contains so many stock characters, it is easy to find stock characters whose characteristic are in direct opposition to each other. The best example is Madame Defarge and Lucie. Lucie shows endless compassion and love throughout the novel. Madame Defarge, on the other hand, show bitterness, hatred, and vengeance. Because the two characters are such dynamic opposites, it makes their characterization more dramatic.
They were looking for Dr. Manette's letter in Chapter 6 of "A Tale of Two Cities." In this chapter, Lucie Manette discovers the hidden letter while cleaning the doctor's old shoemaking bench.
grim and sombre
It is dark and uncertain.
Gabelle is mentioned in Chapter 8 of "A Tale of Two Cities." He is the tax collector of the village of Beauvais, and he plays a significant role in the story as he is accused of embezzlement by the revolutionaries.