读后感
This is a story set in two great cities more than two hundred years ago. London, with its thick fog and flickering headlights, is the bottom of Paris, desperate and decadent.
Too many people have written too much about the great Revolution that took place in Paris. This is a momentous change for France, for Europe, and for the world. The author Dickens is one of the most outstanding realistic critical writers in England. Though he did not see it with his own eyes, he saw it with his rich imagination.
"A Tale of Two Cities" has been hailed as one of the greatest depictions of the French Revolution, and I think the biggest reason is probably because it's different. Unlike other works, such as Carlyle's The French Revolution, Dickens focused more on the joys and sorrows of the underclass. In those days, though, the little people themselves did not command the world's attention. However, the author keenly captures the inextricably linked relationship between these little people and the Great Revolution. It can be said that the French Revolution itself was triggered by the power of the little people.
In this work, I see many, many different people. Honest and kind but persecuted Doctor Manette, beautiful and gentle Lucy, elegant and noble Charles, honest and honest Lowry, cold appearance, warm heart, Bohemian and selfless lofty Sidney, distorted human nature of Mrs. Defauge, frank and loyal Miss Pross, cruel and sinister Evremonde
Brothers complex hatred entanglement, cruel revenge to create more hatred, love in the edge of hell regeneration, but at the cost of life. The intricate scenes, vividly displayed in front of us, seem to reproduce the irrational era.
As a good writer, in Dickens's works, the wonderful language is indispensable. All kinds of figures of speech, metaphor, exaggeration, contrast, humor, satire, are used freely, and the artistry of the work is brought to its peak. Then Mr. Krencher had to listen to Mr. Attorney General take off one by one the straitjackets that Mr. Stevie had put on the gentlemen of the jury, and turn them upside down. At last the judge stood up and shook the straitjacket inside and out. It was obvious that he wanted to cut the shroud for the prisoner. Such wonderful passages abound in the works. Thus, the author wants to express every center, has been reflected incisively and vividly. I believe it will be of great help to our daily study.
Some people say that A Tale of Two Cities is a story of two men and a woman, but I feel that those who say so must not understand what the author really wants to express. If only this is expressed, any work can reach the level of Lucy and Charles, then how can the advantages of A Tale of Two Cities be reflected? It seems to me that the Defarge family's animosity with the French aristocracy, as well as Lucy's, Charles's, and Sidney's emotional problems, are all set up to reflect a common theme. The theme is to look at the relationship between the revolution and the people, to see what really triggered the revolution, what was the result of the bloodshed. I think this is what the author wants to express.
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