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At the end of the book, when he and Miss Pross are escaping from Paris and are still uncertain about the safety of the others, Jerry Cruncher begins to repent his grave robbing and his sometimes violent criticism of his wife's flopping (praying), which he had considered as "agin his prosperity." He came to this condition through having been accused by Mr. Lorry of grave robbing, by the fear that they all experienced in their flight from Paris, and by seeing Sydney Carton in his determination to sacrifice his own life for that of Charles Darnay.

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16y ago

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