Marquis, aka the Marquis Evrémonde, is the uncle of Charles Darnay (whose real last name is Evrémonde). Also, towards the end of the book, during Dr Manette's flashback, a woman was raped and her brother is dying. The two men that raped her were of the Evrémonde family name.
nephew
Charles Darnay is the nephew of the Marquis St. Evremonde in Charles Dickens' novel "A Tale of Two Cities." The Marquis is Charles' uncle, as the Marquis' brother is Charles' father.
The Marquis was able to have Gaspard imprisoned in "A Tale of Two Cities" after Gaspard sought revenge for the death of his child by killing the Marquis.
Monsieur the Marquis asked his servant Gabelle to remove the body from under his carriage in A Tale of Two Cities.
Marquis Evermonde
The man who's child was run over by Marquis's carriage.
The quote "Let them eat grass" is found in Book 2, Chapter 7 of Charles Dickens' novel A Tale of Two Cities. The Marquis St. Evremonde says this line to his carriage driver in reference to the starving peasants he sees on the road.
In the Tale of Two Cities, the Furies represent the oppressive and vengeful nature of the revolutionaries during the French Revolution. They symbolize the relentless pursuit of justice and revenge against the aristocracy.
The Marquis was assassinated by Gaspard , the father of the child that the Marquis ran over. After the Marquis ran over the child, he blamed gaspard for not watching over his children. He threw a coin at gaspard
It is a fiction were characters are concerned. But the French revolution was real.
She wanted money for her husbands headstone.
Marquis St. Evremonde is a cruel and aristocratic character in "A Tale of Two Cities" who represents the oppressive ruling class in France before the revolution. He is responsible for the death of a peasant child and his actions contribute to the growing unrest that leads to the French Revolution.