In book the second's chapter 23 Fire Rises.
In Chapter 9 of A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Darnay arrives in France from England. He has returned to Paris to aid his former servant, Mr. Gabelle, who has been imprisoned during the French Revolution.
When Darney goes to Paris to save Gabelle
Charles Darnay receives a letter from Gabelle, a former servant, asking for his help in A Tale of Two Cities. Gabelle is imprisoned and pleads for Darnay to come to his aid and save him from his dire situation.
Monsieur Gabelle is the local tax collector in the French town of Evremonde. He is a minor character who faces persecution and eventual imprisonment during the French Revolution due to his association with the oppressive aristocracy. Sydney Carton helps rescue him in the novel.
Monsieur the Marquis asked his servant Gabelle to remove the body from under his carriage in A Tale of Two Cities.
Monsieur Gabelle was the former servant of Charles Darnay's family in Charles Dickens' novel "A Tale of Two Cities." He is the local tax collector in France and plays a role in the story's plot, particularly in relation to the Revolution.
Charles Darnay received a letter from Gabelle, the former servant of his late uncle, asking for his help as he was imprisoned during the French Revolution.
After receiving the letter from Mr. Lorry in "A Tale of Two Cities," Charles Darnay rushed to Paris to try to save his former servant, Gabelle, who had been imprisoned by the revolutionaries.
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.
grim and sombre