She is weaving threads. The greek goddesses or Fates are said to literally weave the thread of human life. Also, by her knitting someones name into her piece, she is setting their fate to death
Yes, the main antagonist in Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities is Madame Thérèse Defarge. She is a vengeful and ruthless woman who seeks retribution against the aristocracy during the French Revolution.
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.
Madame Defarge has no other names in the knitting world. It is simply called the Madame Defarge style of knitting.
Madame Defarge.
EVIL
Madame Defarge is the character who decapitated the governor of the Bastille in A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens. She sought revenge for the harm he caused to her family, leading to a pivotal moment in the novel's plot.
knitting
They both were the servants of her
it is to show who will die because of the revolution
Madame Defarge stated that Lucie Manette and her daughter would be the next people she would denounce in "A Tale of Two Cities."
Madame Defarge dies by her own gun during a fight with Miss Pross. Mr. Defarge, however, remains living.
Miss Pross had dedicated her entire life to Lucie Manette, and knew that Madame Defarge would not stop until she found Charles Darnay, the nephew of the man who raped Madame Defarge's sister and Lucie' s husband, and kill him, thus hurting Lucie.