Is Charles Dickens Use Of Foreshadowing In A Tale Of Two Cities

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Utilizing the literary device of foreshadowing, authors attempt to hint at the future events happening in the latter chapters. Charles Dickens uses foreshadowing to indicate death and the silence of the roaring of the revolution in France and Paris during the 1700s. Monsieur and Madame Defarge, leaders of the Revolutionaries, own the wine shop in the poor town of St. Antoine, where peasants constantly scavenge for food. Outside of the shop, red wine “had stained the ground of the narrow street...,where it was spilled” and many hungry peasants ran for it (Dickens 32). To foreshadow the events of the revolution, Dickens uses the wine to symbolize the future blood spilling and to show the mob mentality of the peasants during the guillotine’s

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