No... she uses it as a register for the people that she wants dead.
fictional character
There was a struggle between Miss Pross and Madame Defarge, and Madame Defarge was shot.
Madame Defarge has no other names in the knitting world. It is simply called the Madame Defarge style of knitting.
No, Madame Defarge was not a servant to Dr. Manette. She is a member of the French revolutionaries and is married to Monsieur Defarge, who owns a wine shop in Paris. Madame Defarge's primary role in the novel "A Tale of Two Cities" is to seek revenge against the aristocracy.
In A Tale of Two Cities, Madame Therese Defarge feels that she was cheated out of her family by crimes committed by the Evrémondes. Because of those crimes, she lost her father, brother and sister and seeks revenge against them.
There was a struggle between Miss Pross and Madame Defarge, and Madame Defarge was shot.
Her name is Madame Defarge .
Madame Defarge was always knitting. It was her way of secretly encoding the names of those who were to be executed during the French Revolution into her work, as she sought revenge for the injustices done to her family.
Depressed over Marquis's death, and Madame Defarge comforts her by soothing words.
Madame Defarge is introduced in Book One, Chapter Five of "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens. She is portrayed as a vengeful and ruthless character, who plays a significant role in the French Revolution.
Former servant of Dr. Manette, wife of Madame Defarge, owner of a wine-shop, head of the Saint Antoine section of the French Revolution.
a friend of madame defarge