Mr.Defarge and his wife
Ernest Defarge
A wine-shop.
Ernest and Thérése Defarge. It's in Paris.
The wine shop owned by the Defarges is located in the Saint Antoine district of Paris, France. It is situated in a crowded and poverty-stricken area, where the events of "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens take place.
The wine-shop owned by the Defarges is located in Paris, France.
Charles Darnay and Lucie Manette.
The cask of wine spilling in front of the wine shop. and the people begin to drink the wine off the ground. it shows how poor the people in france are.
In "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens, the "Gorgon's Head" is a sign hanging outside the wine shop owned by Monsieur Defarge in Paris. It symbolizes the violent and oppressive nature of the French Revolution, as well as the power and fear instilled in the aristocracy. The image of the Gorgon's head evokes dread and foreboding among those who see it.
The building that housed Tellson's Bank in Paris was formerly used as a wine-shop.
Former servant of Dr. Manette, wife of Madame Defarge, owner of a wine-shop, head of the Saint Antoine section of the French Revolution.
He was a banker at Telleson's Bank. He also helped Lucie Manette find her father who was in hiding at the Defarge's wine shop, after being released from prison.
Chapter 17 of "A Tale of Two Cities" takes place in the village of Saint Antoine, the impoverished and revolutionary neighborhood of Paris. It is where the Defarges, key characters in the novel, own a wine shop.