Imagine what would happen in the life of Dr. Manette
and Lucie Manette and create a story that provides an
appropriate ending to the story ‘The Shoemaker’ in
200 - 250 words.
Answers
Answer:
A Tale of Two Cities is an emotional and harrowing chapter which shows the psychological harm that prison does to any person. In this story, Lucie Manette and Jarvis Lorrie meet Lucie's father Doctor Manette, who had been freed after eighteen years in the Bastille prison. With no memory of former life as renowned doctor or his family, Doctor Manette called himself a shoemaker, since that was what he learnt to do while in Bastille Prison
EXPLANATION:
Yes the shoemaker would have been able to talk to his doctor.
The doctor has been seriously suffering and appears to have lost all sense of time, place, and identity after 18 years of physical and psychological isolation from the world. Although he is no longer in jail, when you see him, he always seems buried alive. He is hidden from view, both his mind and his body. The doctor looked more dead than alive with his empty eyes and his frail body and his hand looks so transparent even after a little bit of light came in the garret where he was working. When Mr. Lorry and Mr. Defarge try talking to the doctor, the doctor’s mind appears to be starving and unable to understand the most basic questions, and focuses only on his work.
Towards the end, Dr. Manette was found hidden in the secret room in the Defarge wine shop by Jarvis Lorrie and Lucie Manette. The prison broke him down basically. If Defarge asks him if he needs Defarge to open the window, Dr. Manette replies that he must endure everything Defarge says. Light reaches the garret to actually show a doctor, Lucie's touch seems to lift part of the mind and memories of the doctor.
Lucie's face represents his brief expression of consciousness as if it had passed from it like a moving light. When Lucie sits next to her father, his attention falls on her golden hair. Her father shows her the golden hair of his wife and concentrating, turns her completely towards the light and saw her. Later in the embracing of the father and daughter, Doctor Mannette’s cold white head blended with Lucie’s radiant hair, and warmed it and illuminated, as if it were the light of the freedom that shone on him. The love and warmth of his daughter were strong enough to bring Doctor Manette back from the cold, colourless place his mind withdrew from throughout his years of imprisonment.
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Review of a tale of two cities
brainly.in/question/4813932
Explanation: