Reading Feelings
陈璟艺
This is a story set in two great cities more than two hundred years ago.
London with thick fog and swaying headlights, the bottom of desperate
and decadent Paris. Too many people have spent too much time describing
the vigorous revolution that took place in Paris at that time. This is a
transformation of great benefit for France, even for Europe, for the
whole world. The author, Charles Dickens, is one of Britain's most
outstanding realist critical writers. Although he did not witness it
with his own eyes, he relied on his rich imagination to see the scene at
that time. A Tale of Two Cities is known as the most outstanding
masterpiece of the French Revolution, and I think the biggest reason is
probably because it is different. Unlike other works, such as Carlyle's
French Revolution, Dickens focuses more on the joys, sorrows, and
sorrows of the people at the bottom. Although, in those days, these
little people themselves could not attract the attention of the world.
However, the author keenly captures that these little people are
inextricably linked to the Revolution, and it can be said that the
French Revolution itself was triggered by the power of the little
people. In this work, I saw many, many different people. The upright and
kind but persecuted Dr. Manet, the beautiful and gentle Lucy, the
elegant and noble Charles, the loyal and honest Lori, the indifferent
and passionate in the heart, the dissolute and selfless and noble
Sidney, the distorted Mrs. Defatchy, the bold and loyal Miss Pros, the
cruel and insidious Evermont brothers... Complex hatred is entangled,
cruel revenge creates more hatred, and love is reborn on the edge of
hell, but at the cost of life. This intricate scene, vividly displayed
in front of the moment, seems to reproduce the era of losing reason. As
a good writer, in Dickens's work, the brilliance of language is
indispensable. Various rhetorical devices, such as metaphor,
exaggeration, comparison, humor, and irony, are used freely, and the
artistry of the work is also sent to the peak. “...... So Mr. Clencher
had to listen again to how Mr. Attorney General took off the
straitjacket that Mr. Steve had put on the gentlemen of the jury, one by
one, and turned them upside down; ...... At last the judge stood up and
tossed the tights inside and out, and it was evident that he wanted to
cut the shroud for the prisoner. Such wonderful passages abound in the
work. As a result, every center that the author wants to express is
vividly embodied. I believe this will be of great help to our daily Xi.
Some people say that "A Tale of Two Cities" is a story about
two men and a woman, but I think that the person who says this must not
understand the author's real intention. If this is just expressed, any
work can reach the level of Lucy and Charles, so how can the advantages
of "A Tale of Two Cities" be reflected?
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