Explain Dickens' use of symbolism at the beginning of Book 1, Chapter 5 of A Tale of Two Cities, when the wine cask spills in the streets of Paris. Topics to consider include the following: what the spilled wine symbolizes, what the description tells us about the French peasants, and how the scene creates foreshadowing.
Explain Dickens' use of symbolism at the beginning of Book 1, Chapter 5 of A Tale of Two Cities, when the wine cask spills in the streets of Paris. Topics to consider include the following: what the spilled wine symbolizes, what the description tells us about the French peasants, and how the scene creates foreshadowing.
• Wine cask breaks in the street; peasants eagerly drink it up off the ground, revealing that they are oppressed and desperate
• Gaspard, "the tall joker," dips his fingers in the wine and write "blood" on a wall; Dickens says "that wine" too would stain the streets and hands; creates foreshadowing: the bloodshed of the Revolution
• Dickens emphasizes that it is red wine
• Dickens is suggesting that the peasants are willing to resort to violence (reveals their bloodlust)
• The peasants' celebratory spirit foreshadows the communal spirit of the violent revolutionaries (example: when they killed Foulon)
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