English, asked by atiqa5061, 3 months ago

What does Madame Defarge say about dolls and birds? To whom is she referring?
(A Tale of Two Cities)

Answers

Answered by vermanushka7487
2

Answer:

Dolls and birds set upon and plucked this is a metaphor for the taking down of the aristocrats by the revolutionaries. "were shown a flock of birds, unable to fly, and were set upon them to strip them of their feather for your own advantage, you would set upon the finest feathers; would you not?"

Answered by nairaryaashok01
0

Answer:

It is accurate, he responds. Madame de Farge continues by saying that he has seen both birds and dolls today, with the birds being unable to fly and the dolls being spies from aristocratic families like the Evremondes from London.

Explanation:

Madame Defarge is a representation of the turmoil of the French Revolution because she has an unrelenting bloodlust. She can be seen knitting quietly in the wine shop during the book's opening chapters. Her apparent meekness, meanwhile, conceals a ferocious need for retribution. She surreptitiously creates a list of the casualties of the revolution with her stitches. Madame Defarge exposes her true viciousness as the revolution picks up speed. Invading Lucie's physical and psychological space as violence devastates Paris, she turns on Lucie specifically. She first carries out this invasion by memorizing Lucie and her family's faces and adding them to her mental "record" of individuals who would perish during the revolution. Later, she breaks into the teenager's apartment to see if Lucie is lamenting Darnay's impending execution.

To know more about A Tale of Two Cities refer to the link below

https://brainly.in/question/9725484

https://brainly.in/question/37216460

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