he made plans to go to France
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.
Charles Darnay is a French aristocrat who renounces his title and inheritance due to his disapproval of the injustices of the French nobility. He moves to England, where he becomes a tutor and marries Lucie Manette, the daughter of a former French prisoner. Darnay is portrayed as a kind and honorable man who gets entangled in the tumultuous events of the French Revolution.
It seems that, of the major British characters in A Tale of Two Cities, there are several demonstrations of loyalty: Lucie Manette was loyal to her father and her husband and never stopped believing in them and their cause. Charles Darnay, a French nobleman, was so loyal to his countrymen that he strode into the lion's jaw, so to speak, in order to save one. Although he had renounced his nobility, he felt enough loyalty to his uncle the Marquis St. Evremond that he paid his annual visit and tried to convince his uncle of the danger that was approaching. Sidney Carton was faithful to Lucie and his promise to her. He was so loyal, in fact, that he willingly gave his life to save that of Lucie and her child. Miss Pross may seem like a comic character, but the steadfastness she exhibited, especially when she accompanied Lucie and her father when they returned to France, which she loathed, is remarkable. She, too, was willing to give her life (as long as she took Therese Defarge with her) for Lucie and the baby. And, less dramatic but no less moving, was the steady attachment Jarvis Lorry showed to the Manettes through all the years that past since Dr. Manette was recovered. He, too, put himself in danger's way to serve the family. It's suspected that he was just a little in love with Lucie.
King Charles the First gave that Charter to the 2nd Lord Baltimore in 1632.
King Charles II.
King Charles I of England.
Charles II
CHarles 11 (the second)
His younger brother.
he gave it to a lord proprietors
he gave him money to sail
King Charles ll of England