because of the way Barsad talked.
Madame Defarge has no other names in the knitting world. It is simply called the Madame Defarge style of knitting.
John Barsad
It is ironic because Defarge and Madame Defarge just talked about John Barsad the night before. Madame Defarge said "'He shall be registered to-morrow'" and John Barsad came the next day (the day Madame Defarge said that she'll knit his name onto her hit list/register).
There was a struggle between Miss Pross and Madame Defarge, and Madame Defarge was shot.
There was a struggle between Miss Pross and Madame Defarge, and Madame Defarge was shot.
Depressed over Marquis's death, and Madame Defarge comforts her by soothing words.
a friend of madame defarge
Three witnesses who denounced Charles Darnay in the trial were Ernest Defarge, Madame Defarge, and Dr. Manette. They testified against him based on their perceived connections to his aristocratic family and past actions.
No, Miss Pross does not kill Madame Defarge. Instead, they have a physical struggle during which Miss Pross accidentally shoots and kills her brother, Solomon Pross. Madame Defarge is eventually killed by a stray bullet from a soldier fighting in the revolution.
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.
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.
Not madame defarge. She is just a revolutionary that accompanies madame. She is known as madame's sidekick or madame's shadow. The Vengeance is manifested in the guillotine and the irrational crowds that feed it.