when defarge says to his wife "at last it has come,"why does she not totally agree?What mystification does it indicate?
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Explanation:
Defarge was a character who was a servant of Doctor Alexandre Manette. He was the one who had more rational aspect of the French revolution while his wife had slightly different point of view on this. That is why when he said that French revolution has come and this would eliminate the class hatredness, his wife showed her reservations on this
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She did not totally agree as she still had people on the knit list.
- The question has been asked from the story A tale of two cities by Charles Dickens.
- Several themes were represented by the wife. She was a manifestation of the Fates in one form or another.
- She had been through much more suffering than the people were actually going through, so she had no sympathy for them.
- She knits, which secretly represented the names of people to be destroyed. Thus, when he says at last it has come she does not agree totally.
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