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A Tale Of Two Cities, Four Month Read Along. (Title edited by MNHQ at request of OP)

267 replies

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 03/01/2026 11:24

Welcome to a 6 month read along of Dicken’s 12th novel A Tale of Two Cities
We will be reading it using the following format, and discussing the chapters on the first day of the following month: (So January chapters discussed from 1st Feb onwards etc)

A Tale of Two Cities

6-Month Read-Along Calendar

Start: 1 January 2026
Finish: 30 June 2026

🗓️
JANUARY 2026

Book the First: Recalled to Life
(Chapters 1–7)

✔ Book the First complete

🗓️
FEBRUARY 2026

Book the Second: The Golden Thread
(Chapters 1–6)

🗓️
MARCH 2026

Book the Second: The Golden Thread
(Chapters 7–12)

✔ Midway through Book the Second

🗓️
APRIL 2026

Book the Second: The Golden Thread
(Chapters 13–18)

🗓️
MAY 2026

Book the Second: The Golden Thread
(Chapters 19–24)

✔ Book the Second complete

🗓️
JUNE 2026

Book the Third: The Track of a Storm
(Chapters 1–15)

✔ Novel complete

I know very little about this book other than its set in revolutionary Paris and London, let’s hope it’s a goodie!

OP posts:
Thread gallery
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DesdamonasHandkerchief · 18/01/2026 19:57

Yes, I’m thinking the end of the first book would be a good place to stop. So up to but not including chapter 6.

OP posts:
Benvenuto · 23/01/2026 17:01

I’ve just finished Book the First too. I was a bit dubious about the first chapter - I can see why it is so famous but it didn’t grab me (possibly due to reading Les Mis alongside). But then I started reading about the mail coach struggling uphill in the mud and began to enjoy it immensely.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 27/01/2026 17:21

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 18/01/2026 19:57

Yes, I’m thinking the end of the first book would be a good place to stop. So up to but not including chapter 6.

Oops up to and including Chapter 6 that should say.

OP posts:
TimeforaGandT · 31/01/2026 18:05

I decided to only start the book this week so I could remember what had happened when we came to discuss it. Now finished Book 1.

I am sure I have read this before but many many years ago and have no recollection of the story.

Really enjoyed Book 1.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 00:04

Hello all.
A good start, yes? I thought so.

Some context:
ATOTC was written in 1859, sixty years after the French Revolution ended so the things he describes were in living memory for a few readers and recent history for all.

Chronologically it is late Dickens, appearing between Little Dorrit (1857) and Great Expectations (1860), with only Our Mutual Friend (1864) and the unfinished The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1870) to come after that.

It was released during a period of personal turmoil for Dickens, including his separation from his wife, and it marks a departure from his usual contemporary, sprawling social commentary novels.

I made some notes on the first chapter, drawing on the footnotes in my edition to explain the sometimes random references:

So first of all, that opening paragraph with its famous juxtapositions, ‘It was the best of times it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness…’
Despite the fact it becomes something of a word salad it certainly causes a tingle in the brain of any bookworm!

Definitely the most famous opening lines in Dickens extensive canon. I can only think of ‘Marley was dead to begin with’, ‘Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life’ … etc, and the spiel about why Pip was known as Pip that come anywhere close to its notoriety and recognisability. (If that’s a word!)

Dickens tells us his novel opens in 1775 and then goes on to reference the historical and cultural context of the time in both England and France, much of which has been lost in the mists of time for modern readers.

He includes references to the royal couples of George III and Charlotte Sophia of England, Louis XIV and Marie-Antoinette of France.

The fact that the American Revolution was beginning is mentioned in passing.

Mrs Southcott, a farmer‘s daughter, who wrote many millennial prophecies which she began to publish in 1801 and a ‘prophetic private’ who was an earlier millennial prophet conflated from two separate records in the Annual Registrar are mentioned.

The Cock Lane ghost refers to the ghost of a murder victim which supposedly manifested itself by nocturnal disturbances at a house in Cock Lane, West Smithfield, London in 1762 - but was later exposed as a fraud. (Spiritual hoaxers were a London phenomenon of the 1850’s when Dickens was writing this novel.)

The printing of money in France is referenced, a government debt that is generally held to have precipitated the events that led to the revolution.

Harsh punishments, faithfully recorded by Dickens, for those who France deemed to have committed heresy are detailed, as is the shocking level of crime in England. (Plus ça change - as I read yet another article about the rise and rise in shop lifting and London being the phone theft capital of Europe!)

Back in the morning to discuss the rest of Book 1 but for now sleep beckons!

OP posts:
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 00:11

Oh and another thought, do we want to shorten the read along? So we do Book Two (the longest part) over Feb/March and Book 3 in April.
Given two people have enjoyed it so much they’ve read the whole book, and now I have a copy I can see it’s relatively short for Dickens, this might be preferably - although I’ll go with the consensus.

OP posts:
MotherOfCatBoy · 01/02/2026 07:11

Placemarking. I’m not reading ATOTC right now but I read it a couple of years ago and it’s still pretty vivid - it was my first Dickens. I want to follow the thread if I may for the discussion and the counterpoint with Les Mis…

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 07:33

Please do follow @MotherOfCatBoy, and we’d be interested to hear your thoughts on the book.

OP posts:
ChessieFL · 01/02/2026 08:19

Thanks for sharing all that context of the first chapter Desdemona - my edition doesn’t have footnotes so some of that background had passed me by.

This was a great start to the book and I agree that it has a slightly different feel to it than Dickens’s other books.

The character descriptions are wonderful, especially poor old Mr Manette (who of course probably isn’t really very old - maybe only in his 40s?).

I’m intrigued to learn more about why he was imprisoned and what the connections are between all the characters. Mme Defarge is a great character, there knitting but never seeing (although of course in reality seeing everything).

I’m happy to go along with others regarding the length of the readalong, happy to shorten it or stick with the original plan.

ThePoshUns · 01/02/2026 08:32

I enjoyed book 1, I found the descriptions so rich, I could picture each scene vividly in my mind.
I haven’t read Dickens before and thought it would be hard work, but is a vey easy read. I am happy to go a bit faster as I stopped to wait for this deadline.

CutFlowers · 01/02/2026 09:17

I really enjoyed the first book. The gothic feel of the carriage journey to Dover was very well done and you can see it would be exciting in serial format. I was very sad when the shoemaker answered his number instead of his name. Also happy to stick or change the pace as suits all.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 10:40

I agree that Chapter 2, ‘The Mail’, is very evocative, cinematic in its scope. I can almost hear the whinnies and snorts of the poor horses lumbering up Shooters Hill in the dark with their too heavy carriage to pull. The passengers tense and suspicious of each other and anxious about the possibility of highway robbery. Then the fear of all concerned when Jerry gallops up behind them with his message for Jarvis Lorry nearly getting himself shot for his pains. It would make a great opening scene for the adaptation.

I enjoyed this little comic bit from Chapter 4:
The Concord bed chamber being always assigned to a passenger by the mail, and passengers by the mail being always heavily wrapped up from head to foot, the room had the odd interest for the establishment of the Royal George, that although but one kind of man was seem to go into it, all kinds of varieties of man came out of it.’

Is anyone else, who was also on the Dombey & Sons read along, getting very powerful Susan Nipper vibes from the ‘strong woman’ servant of Miss Manette?

I’ve got a few illustrations in my copy which I’ll attempt to photograph and put on here as we go along.

OP posts:
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 10:46

The illustrations that would have been used thus far:

A Tale Of Two Cities, Four Month Read Along. (Title edited by MNHQ at request of OP)
A Tale Of Two Cities, Four Month Read Along. (Title edited by MNHQ at request of OP)
A Tale Of Two Cities, Four Month Read Along. (Title edited by MNHQ at request of OP)
A Tale Of Two Cities, Four Month Read Along. (Title edited by MNHQ at request of OP)
OP posts:
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 11:32

Because I’m a geek I usually read two free online literary guides designed for students alongside any Classics. Shmoop which is a bit more fun and ‘down with the kids’ and Gradesaver which is a bit more scholarly and has more insightful analysis. I’ll post the Gradesaver summary and analysis of Book 1 here for anyone who’s interested:

A Tale of Two Cities Summary and Analysis of Book I, Chapters 1-4

Chapter 1: The Period

The year is 1775 and the settings are London and Paris, two lands ruled by monarchs. England is on the brink of the American Revolution. The French Revolution seems inevitable, with trees waiting to be converted to guillotines and the spirit of rebellion silently infecting the countryside. Similar disturbances are common across England, with highway robberies on the increase and thievery reaching all the way into high society. Executions are common for both minor and major offenses.

Chapter 2: The Mail

Mr. Jarvis Lorry, a confidential clerk at Tellson's Bank of London, is on his way to Dover in a mail-coach. It is a cold night and he is wrapped up to the ears, so his physical appearance is concealed from his fellow-passengers, all of whom are strangers. The coachman fears his passengers just as they fear one another, since highway robberies are exceedingly common and any of them could be in league with robbers. So when he hears a horse galloping towards the coach on the road, he becomes fearful.

Jerry Cruncher, the rider of the horse, asks for Mr. Lorry, giving him a paper message to wait at Dover for a young lady. Mr. Lorry's cryptic reply is, "recalled to life." After this exchange, Mr. Lorry gets back in the coach, which continues to Dover. Jerry pauses and reflects on the long, hard gallop he had from London and muses to himself that he has been given a very strange message.

Chapter 3: The Night Shadows

The chapter opens with a reflection on the fact that all humans are mysteries to one another, despite the availability of their outer appearances. The three passengers remain a mystery to one another as they advance upon Dover. Jerry Cruncher returns to Temple Bar remaining uneasy about the cryptic message.

Mr. Lorry dozes off and begins to dream in the coach, imagining the comforting environment of Tellson's Bank. He is then confronted by what he calls a spectre: a man who has been buried for eighteen years and has dug his way out. A conversation that Mr. Lorry's brain repeats three times with this spectre confirms that he has been buried for eighteen years. As the sun rises, Mr. Lorry wakes up from his dream and surveys the vivid countryside, pitying a man who would be locked away from nature for eighteen years.

Chapter 4: The Preparation

Mr. Lorry arrives in Dover in the mail coach, settles in, and takes his breakfast alone in the coffee-room. A conversation with a waiter establishes that Tellson's Bank operates both in London and Paris, but Mr. Lorry has not traveled to Paris for fifteen years. Mr. Lorry finishes his breakfast, strolls by the ocean, and then returns for a bottle of claret. His peace is disrupted by a lady referred to as Mam'selle (Miss Manette), who requests to see him immediately.

He sees her in her room and expresses emotion at the sight of her, recalling that he carried her as a babe in arms across the Channel. Miss Manette is an orphan whose financial affairs are managed by Tellson's Bank, and she was informed that Mr. Lorry would accompany her on a journey to France--and that he would have some surprising news for her. After a few false starts, Mr. Lorry manages to compose himself and tell Miss Manette that her French father (who had married an Englishwoman, who was Miss Manette's mother) was still alive in France. He was recovered after years of imprisonment and is now living in the house of an old servant in Paris.

Miss Manette understands what a wreck her father must be, and she is distressed to imagine that she is being carried to see her father's ghost, rather than her real father. Mr. Lorry describes their mission as one to spirit him away from France to England--and that they should avoid naming the matter, explaining the rescue as the enigmatic experience of being "recalled to life." Miss Manette is overcome, and she swoons. Her servant comes to her rescue, pushing Mr. Lorry out of the way to administer smelling-salts.

Analysis

In what is one of the most famous opening lines in modern literature ("It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."), Dickens captures the extremes of idealism and terror of the revolutionary period of the late 18th century. With the exception of figures of historical significance, in particular the monarchs, no characters directly related to the plot are introduced in this opening, reflecting Dickens's choice to focus on the setting rather than the characterization of individuals in this historical novel.

Dickens refers obliquely, rather than directly, to the historical figures and events of the period, giving his introduction a fable-like quality. Rather than naming the monarchs and openly discussing the American Revolution, he refers to the "king with a large jaw and queen with a plain face" in England, the "king with a large jaw and queen with a fair face" in France, and a "congress of British subjects in America." Death is personified as a Farmer and Fate as a Woodman, powers who silently work their way through the French countryside. The distance provided by the tone of a fable was desirable for Dickens since his novel followed the historical events so closely in time. A Tale of Two Cities was published just 67 years after the events it describes. While the horrors of the French Revolution have been eclipsed for modern readers by the world wars and genocides of the twentieth century, the terrors of the French Revolution were the horror story of Dickens's time. His indirect tone helps his readers gain distance from an event that they would have contemplated and debated many times before.

Dickens postulates the historical inevitability of the French Revolution, illustrating that despite the monarchs' complacency in their divine right, discontentment was growing in the countryside. He does not describe the same inevitability of rebellion in England, however, just the widespread feeling of lawlessness exemplified in the second chapter. Knowing that there was no comparable rebellion or even labor unrest in England at the end of the eighteenth century, Dickens portrays English society as dangerous but not lethal. Even so, there is a lack of proportion in England as demonstrated by executions for offenders ranging from murderers to "wretched pilferers." The injustice of equal treatment for unequal crimes reflects Dickens' ever-present concern with social justice, but it hardly compares with the unrest and injustices in France.

With this contrast in the direness of social and criminal situations in the two countries, Dickens sets up a dichotomy that is to dominate the rest of the novel. With likeable but somewhat undeveloped individuals, the focus of the text is ever on the setting and the communities, the historical period as much as the plot itself. The title of A Tale of Two Cities is crucial for interpretation of the novel, suggesting that the opposing cities of Paris and London constitute the true protagonists of the novel, transcending the importance of the main characters.

The first chapter only acknowledges in the last sentence that the narrative is to be a "chronicle" rather than pure history, when the narrator recognizes that the year 1775 included profound changes not only for the monarchs of France and England, but also for the "myriad of small creatures-the creatures of this chronicle among the rest-along the roads that lay before them." The historical novelist's role will humanize the great historical events of the day by narrating them through the lives of individuals. He links the inevitability of the Revolution to the inevitability of smaller events in individual lives, and the heavy hand of Fate will remain highly visible throughout the rest of the novel.

The real story begins in Chapter 2, introducing the setting of misty fear that permeates the rest of the novel. This gloom links Dickens's work with the earlier Gothic movement in literature. The sense of fear and uncertainty that the characters feel on the road is picked up later in the plot line of Charles Darnay's accusation. A highway was one of the most fearful places that a gentleman could travel, because they were plagued by highway robbers who would hold up and raid the coaches. Dickens evokes this sense of fear by projecting it onto the natural characteristics of the road, using figures of speech: the mist is "like an evil spirit" and "as the waves of an unwholesome sea." Such dangerous or supernatural imagery helps build up the horror of the arrival of Jerry Cruncher on horseback, making his entrance quite dramatic.

Chapter 2 is not all ominous darkness, however. Dickens undercuts the dramatic scene with his characteristic wit. He ironically describes the condition of the passengers' fear for one another and the guard, and the guard's fear of everyone but his horses, as the Dover coaches' "usual genial position." This idea suggests that the state of fear is so commonplace that it has become expected, even verging on pleasant. Dickens also comically describes the animalistic behavior of the other passengers of the coach when they feel that their physical safety is threatened. They "more swiftly than politely" help Mr. Lorry out of the coach, and they only reluctantly allow him back in--after they have stored away their valuables in their boots.

Chapter 2 also is filled with auditory details; not much visual information is available on a dark road. The horses snorting and the audible beating hearts of the passengers highlight the drama of a dark road more even than a description of darkness could do. Dialogue dominates, and Dickens uses the Shakespearean device of distinguishing the various social classes in a text by their accents and elevation of their speech. The coachman's oaths ("My blood!") and noises ("Tst! Yah!") as well as the guard's ungrammatical language ("If so be as you're quick, sir") are faithfully and phonetically transcribed. Mr. Lorry's membership in a different class altogether is made obvious in his first sentence ("There is nothing to apprehend"), and he continues to speak in grammatical sentences without the use of slang.

A Tale of Two Cities was produced in serial form, so it was in Dickens's interest to end each chapter with a cliffhanger so that his readers would purchase the next installment. The cliffhanger in "The Mail" is the suggestion that Jerry Cruncher is a killer because he is haunted by the great amount of trouble he would be in, should the dead come back to life. His mannerisms reveal this guilt, as he unmuffles himself only to pour liquor into his mouth, and then quickly covers his face again. His eyes betray his inner guilt, "being...much too near together-as if they were afraid of being found out in something singly if they kept too far apart."

In Chapter 3, an unidentified first-person narrator elaborates the theme of disjunction between people's appearance and their nature, giving it a political gloss. The fear caused by the unknown seems to be justified, because the multiplicity of people's secret hearts is associated with an "awfulness" akin to "Death itself." Urban settings, which Dickens criticized greatly, exacerbate this horror by putting many dark secrets in close proximity. The narrator bemoans the fact that he will never get to know a person thoroughly--a part will always remain secret. Still, these secrets are equally available to all men, in that the messenger has "the same possessions as the King, the first Minister of State, or the richest merchant in London."

Despite people's secrets, the facades of Dickensian characters usually reflects their inner lives quite fairly. For example, in Oliver Twist, the great scene of betrayal occurs when Nancy uses her attractive and honest appearance to attract Oliver into a group of bandits. That her outer beauty echoes an inner beauty is vindicated by the fact that she later repents and deceives Sikes to assist Oliver.

Mr. Lorry's first dream identifies the motif of money and business that characterizes him for the rest of the novel. Mr. Lorry uses business as a watchword of comfort when he gets into situations that make him nervous. He is rattled by the business that he must undertake when he arrives in Dover, so he comforts himself by imagining the sound of the harness as the "chink of money" and the carriage as a strong-room where he could check that his customers' valuables are safe. That business is a safety net for Mr. Lorry, a neutral place that no one should fear, is illustrated later in the text when he is confronted with emotionally charged situations. At such times, Mr. Lorry mutters the word "business" repeatedly to brace himself for a challenge or to try to reassure others.

The dominant theme of Chapter 4 is that of disorder overcoming order. Mr. Lorry's actions upon his arrival in Dover reinforce the reader's previous impression of him as a man who can be trusted to act according to convention and pattern. He turns down the head drawer's suggestion that he rest, saying that he won't go to bed until night. But the orderliness of his person is opposed by outside forces, as manifest in the small detail of the regular ticking of his watch, "as though it pitted its gravity and longevity against the levity and evanescence of the fire."

In the beginning of Chapter 4, everything is ordered according to Mr. Lorry's expectations. When he drops off to sleep, this "completes his resemblance to a man who was sitting for his portrait." The waiter watches Mr. Lorry comfortably, "according to the immemorial usage of waiters in all ages." This orderliness is disturbed when the ritual of his meal is interrupted by Miss Mannette's request to see him immediately. The extent to which he relies on familiar patterns is hyperbolized in the description of his reaction to this too early summons as "stolid desperation." Though he is at first pleased with her, recognizing the meaning of her social conventions ("she curtseyed to him...with a pretty desire to convey to him that she felt how much older and wiser he was than she"), he becomes rapidly distressed when recognizable social conventions break down. When she becomes distraught and kneels as she hears the truth, he gets quite upset with the breach of convention, asking, "In heaven's name why should you kneel to me?"

This triumph of disorder is associated with the novel's geographic movement toward France. The dichotomy described in the first chapter between England the dangerous and France the truly lethal is again evident; the details associated with disorder are particularly French. The closeness of location to France is evident in that the weather occasionally clears up enough to allow a view of the French coast. The wild sea, a symbol of disorder, rages at the cliffs "madly," seemingly sent from France. Corruption, evidenced by the fact that men who did no trade would suddenly become wealthy, is connected to the sea trade--and thus also with France. Mr. Lorry highlights corruption as particularly French, insinuating that the horror of Dr. Manette's predicament was only possible "across the water."

The atmosphere that Dickens creates is revealed in smaller details first. Dickens wants to emphasize the death and burial themes. Darkness represents death; hence, the room in which Lorry and Miss Manette meet is a very dark room, ill lit and filled with dark trimmings. Any light that shines in the rooms in absorbed, or "buried" by the mahogany table. The cupids in the room are made of dark materials, and they are in varying states of "death" (or disrepair), from maimed to decapitated. The beheaded cupids also hint at the final source of death within the novel: the terror of the guillotine.

As a writer of serialized popular novels, Dickens uses not only cliffhangers, but also extensive foreshadowing, which creates further suspense. Reading in the nineteenth century was a more social activity than it is in modern times, and it was not uncommon for installments to be read out loud for the benefit of members of the family who were illiterate. Heavy foreshadowing complemented this social reception of the novels, allowing the group to argue over the implications of what was written and what might happen next. Dickens foreshadows the fact that the "recalled to life" message is related to Miss Manette in the description of her room. Her connection with the once "buried" man is evident in the dark "funereal" furnishings of her room, and the candles on the burnished dark table are "gloomily reflected on every leaf as if they were buried."

OP posts:
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 11:35

A Tale of Two Cities Summary and Analysis of Book I, Chapters 5-6

Chapter 5: The Wine-Shop

Outside Monsieur Defarge's wine-shop in Paris, a cask of wine is dropped and broken. The wine spills over the cobblestones, and people stop what they were doing to drink the wine off the street. When the wine runs out and people return to the activities of their daily lives, the mark of hunger is visible on all of them. Even the street signs reflect this hunger, with the butcher's sign painted with only a scrap of meat, the baker's with a tiny loaf. The only thing with the appearance of strength and robustness are weapons: axes, knives, guns.

Monsieur Defarge watches the incident with the wine cask, talking to Gaspard, who dips his finger in the wine and mud and writes "blood" on a wall. Defarge wipes this word away. When Defarge returns to his shop, his wife coughs slightly and gestures with her eyebrow that he should take a look around the store. He sees Mr. Lorry and Miss Manette seated in his store, as well as three men apparently named Jacques, which is also Monsieur Defarge's own name. He sends the three to view a room that they wish to see, and Mr. Lorry requests a word with him. He reveals his and Miss Manette's identities and asks to see Dr. Manette, and Defarge accordingly conducts them to the fifth-floor apartment.

Mr. Lorry is displeased both by the fact that Dr. Manette is locked in, and that they can see the three Jacqueses spying on him through chinks in the wall. Miss Manette enters although she is afraid. She finds her white-haired father in a garret, making shoes.

Chapter 6: The Shoemaker

Dr. Manette is absorbed in making shoes, and at first he hardly responds to the arrival of his visitors. When asked his name, Dr. Manette replies: "One Hundred and Five, North Tower." He claims to have learned shoemaking "here," illustrating that he believes he is still imprisoned.

Although he only partially recognizes Mr. Lorry, Dr. Manette is stricken by the sight of his daughter. He identifies her golden curls as the same hair that he wears in a rag around his neck as a forlorn souvenir of his infant daughter. She convinces him that she is indeed her daughter by emotionally commanding him to weep for the past wrongs that they have both undergone.

Preparations are made at his daughter's request to remove Dr. Manette immediately from Paris. As he is carried from the garret to the coach, he expresses confusion that he is not leaving the prison that he thought he was in, not finding a drawbridge where he has expected.

The first book ends with Mr. Lorry wondering what powers could be restored to a resurrected man, versus what was lost to him in his burial.

Analysis

Chapter 5 is the first chapter in the novel to be set in France, and it introduces themes that will be associated with this country through the rest of the novel. The setting involves unutterable misery and filth, giving a motive for the class struggle that is later to take place at this location. Dickens dwells especially on the appalling condition of Defarge's apartment, a "foul nest" with refuse lying around, and a place where the atmosphere is generally dark and poisonous.

The spilled red wine is an obvious cipher for spilled blood, and Dickens uses the crowd's enthusiasm for its spillage as an indication of how they will greet the coming revolution. They are wine-thirsty and bloodthirsy. Their reaction to the spill is notable not only for its eagerness but also for the social ties that it creates among the lower class--who rarely, if ever, drink wine. Under its influence, they sing, dance, and drink further to one another's health. In this scene the reason for the revolution is clear, as Dickens artfully describes the conditions of the poor. Before the wine is spilled, and after the wine is gone, the people return to their states of hunger, to their brutal manual work for no pay, to their gloomy and lonely states of existence. The spilling of the wine is the one thing that gives these people spirit. Yet it also takes away a portion of their humanity. When they finish drinking the wine, they become animals, "acquiring a tigerish smear about the mouth." The very thing that brings them together also makes them bestial and dangerous.

All the men of this chapter are not actually named Jacques. Instead, the name serves as a code word that identifies all the followers of the coming revolution. Here the revolutionaries actually have an elaborate code that reveals itself in subtle ways. For instance, later Madame Defarge's coughs and hair ornaments mean that someone dangerous is in the shop. Because the underground movements can work in secret codes and ways, they become more dangerous.

Monsieur Defarge's character is evident in his face. For Dickens, the distance between the eyes is a crucial indicator of whether a man is a criminal or not. Monsieur Defarge's eyes are set a good distance apart, and it is later revealed that Madame Defarge encourages his criminal activities. Madame Defarge is a much more interesting and mysterious character than her husband. Her every gesture is watched by her husband and the other patrons of the bar, she is the one who gives him cues, and it is her initiative that guides the course of events.

Mr. Lorry's agitation at the breaches of convention in Dover increase multifold, since there is no social pattern for the extraordinary introduction that takes place in Paris. Monsieur Defarge takes care to follow social patterns, but he does so in a way that reveals his more sinister intentions. When he recognizes Miss Manette as his former master's daughter, Defarge bends on one knee, putting her hand to his lips. It is "a gentle action not at all gently done." In an ordered world, the gentility of an action reflects the gentility of its intention; here, Dickens shows that this balance is undermined. Mr. Lorry tries to reassure Miss Manette, repeating the words "courage" and "business"--which to him are related and reassuring concepts. His constant repetition of the word "business" is farcical, given the very un-businesslike role in which he once again finds himself.

Chapter 6 is concerned primarily with Dr. Manette's affliction. His is the first and clearest representation of resurrection, which continues to be a major theme in the novel. Miss Manette's fear that she was being brought to meet her father's ghost rather than her father is somewhat justified by his spectral appearance and voice, which had "lost the life and resonance of a human voice." The immediate reaction of those closest to him is one of surprise and horror rather than surprise and delight (compare the resurrection of Jesus in the Gospels). The liveliest-looking part of Dr. Manette's face is that which the author has previously deemed the most important: his "exceedingly bright eyes." Here lie the seeds of recovery for the resurrected man.

Lightness overcoming darkness is a consistent pattern in this chapter, and it represents his daughter's role in his life from this point forward. In the previous chapter, the garret was described as extremely dark, but the entrance of the visitors now causes a "broad ray of light" to fall into the garret. Details of her father's person include his lead-colored (prison-colored) nails, which contrast with Miss Manette's "fair" and free visage. That she will remain impervious to his darkness, and that she will affect him with her own light rather than the reverse, is depicted in the passage: "His cold white head mingled with her radiant hair, which warmed and lighted it as though it were the light of Freedom shining on him." The very fact that Manette is alive is a great miracle, but his resurrection is not complete until he is exposed to the lightness of his daughter.

The touching scene between Doctor Manette and his daughter is typical of the sentimental novel. The genre of the sentimental novel was popular in Britain in the eighteenth century. It usually depicted virtue in affliction, which seldom fails to elicit emotional responses from readers. Some of the most famous sentimental novels prior to the explosion of literary Romanticism include Laurence Sterne's A Sentimental Journey and Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield. A family reunited after years of suffering would be a typical theme of these novels, as would a beautiful but afflicted heroine.

Lucie's hair in particular will return as a common theme. As one will see through the novel, Lucie will be the one factor that links all the disparate lives together; this linkage is represented by the golden strands of her hair. Here the hair physically links her to her father and to the past. Upon seeing the strands of her hair, Dr. Manette believes that Lucie is actually her long dead mother, who also had long, golden hair.

Although Dickens has set part of Book One in France, the great majority of the Book has taken place in England. This is part of an overarching mirror image. Book Two will be the linking Book, with actions taking place in both England and France. In Book Three, all the action will take place in France. The relative peacefulness of England and all it represents in this Book can be compared to the wildness of France in the Third Book.

OP posts:
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 11:53

Oh and one more illustration from Book 1:

A Tale Of Two Cities, Four Month Read Along. (Title edited by MNHQ at request of OP)
OP posts:
MagicSpaceTurtle · 01/02/2026 12:09

Thanks for sharing the illustrations Desdemona.
Having read most of Dickens work I agree that this feels different to his other work
The chapters of this first book are so well described and in a few short chapters I think he really gives us a feel of the period in which it is set. We have references to both the French and British monarchies, highwaymen, grave robbing, spiritualism and the levels of poverty prevalent in France.

HelenaWilson · 01/02/2026 12:54

Whenever I read these opening chapters, I'm struck by how tastes change. Nowadays Dickens' editor would tell him to ditch the opening chapter and get straight into the action with the Dover mail. A sign of how much shorter attention spans are, and how it's considered necessary to grab the reader in the opening lines.

But Dickens was his own editor, and he had to fill up the space in All the Year Round every week. And as a Big Name, he would get away with things that lesser writers wouldn't; rather like people saying the later Harry Potter books could have done with much tighter editing.

The Dover Mail chapter always resonated with me, because when I first read it I lived close to Shooters Hill. In the days of the Routemaster, it wasn't unheard of for the bus not to make it up the hill.

If anyone's interested, here's a section from a 1769 map of Kent, showing the Dover Road going over Shooters Hill:
https://col.rct.uk/sites/default/files/collection-online/c/5/477412-1409249418.jpg

The whole map is in the Royal Collection Trust; you can trace the whole journey to Dover if you want:
https://www.rct.uk/collection/701700/a-topographical-map-of-the-county-of-kent-in-twenty-five-sheets-on-a-scale-of-two

https://col.rct.uk/sites/default/files/collection-online/c/5/477412-1409249418.jpg

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/02/2026 13:13

Fantastic old maps @HelenaWilson
That’s so true about editing and attention spans.

OP posts:
FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 01/02/2026 15:48

Thank you Desdamona and HelenaWilson too. I enjoyed hearing that Shooters Hill is a real place.

I found the Gradesaver summaries really good for expansion on the main themes and the significance of small details such as the decapitated cupids in the small, dark room where Lucie meets Jarvis Lorry, for example. It's significant that 'Lucie' as a name means 'brightness, hope and enlightenment'. She is like a beacon of light in the novel and draws people to her for all that she's a quiet character.

I agree that the servant woman is cut from the same cloth as Susan Nipper from 'Dombey and Son'. She is brilliant as you will see later on in the book :)

I really loved this book. I think it's so atmospheric; the the sense of unease at the outset that escalates into full-blown terror is very well done. The mob becomes terrifying later on.

The book feels quite compact in comparison to other Dickens books, partly because there is only a small cast of characters for a change. Also, the historical action is somewhat compressed according to what I read in the footnotes and I suppose you could say that Dickens edited the action to highlight what he wanted to depict in the French Revolution, but I think this makes for a very engaging read.

TremendousThirst · 01/02/2026 16:02

Thank you for sharing the summaries! I read all these chapters earlier in the month and was going to refresh my memory with an audiobook listen before the discussion but didn’t get there. I’m onboard with compressing a bit!

cassandre · 01/02/2026 21:31

Wow, @DesdamonasHandkerchief , what a wealth of information! Thank you. The gradesaver analyses are very good I think.

I thought this first book was great. As others have said, it has quite a different feel to the Dickens novels I've read more recently. The pace seems very different due to the shorter installments (weekly instead of monthly). It's not as leisurely. I'm quite conscious of the installments because my Penguin edition has 'end of instalment 1' and so on included at the end of the relevant chapters.

Speaking of pace, I'd be happy either to read more at one go or to stick with the original plan, whatever others prefer.

I thought Dickens did a masterful job of imagining what it would be like for someone to be freed after so many years of incarceration: how the trauma would manifest itself, and how the person would be a shadow of their former self. @ChessieFL that's a really good point about how Dr Manette isn't actually that old. I was thinking of him as grandfather-age but you're right, his daughter is 'not more than 17', so he must be in his 40s or even younger.

The build-up of suspense in the early chapters is great, with Mr Lorry's imaginary conversation replaying in his head. 'I hope you care to live?' 'I can't say.' Very moving.

I see lots of connections to other novels that we have read / are reading on MN. The prisoner identifying himself by number is like Jean Valjean (not that I've actually managed to catch up with the Les Miz read along yet, argh!). An innocent man coming out of long incarceration, with his personality forever changed, is like The Count of Monte Cristo. The theme of a father imprisoned and a loyal daughter is like Little Dorrit (interesting that Dickens wrote that novel just before he wrote this one). And yes, Miss Manette's fierce woman servant made me think straight away of Susan Nipper!

Jarvis Lorry is also a recognisable Dickens type, isn't he? The quiet employee with an unerring ethical sense and a heart of gold.

Lucie of the golden hair is already too saintlike to be true, but I love her anyway.

I've read this novel before many years ago, but don't remember the plot at all (which is good for the purposes of rereading it!). Defarge is clearly not just a villain, given that he's provided shelter to Manette, but there is definitely something sinister about both him and his wife.

Interesting point by gradesaver about how the title of the novel doesn't refer to a main character, as Dickens' titles usually do, but to the two cities (which points to the novel's genre as a historical novel). I'm a huge Francophile so am already enjoying the French plot strands.

This is very readable and I'm loving it so far!

crumpet · 01/02/2026 21:34

BitOutOfPractice · 03/01/2026 12:33

Oh I read this as a teenager and sobbed my heart out.

I think this is the only book which has made me cry. On a train, decades ago.

HelenaWilson · 01/02/2026 21:55

And yes, Miss Manette's fierce woman servant made me think straight away of Susan Nipper!

Dickens produced some splendid older women - Betsey Trotwood is another - in contrast to the sometimes drippy young heroines. I wonder who the older women in his life were who provided the inspiration.

MrsALambert · 01/02/2026 22:29

I really enjoyed book one. It’s a period of time I find fascinating and the description of the people outside the wine shop was almost chilling. I’ve very much drawn in to keep reading. I do find I struggle with the lengthy descriptions and find I have to go back and reread sections of it as I miss parts. I had found that with other Dicken’s books. Every sentence is so rich and vivid I don’t want to skip anything.

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