Tale of Two Cities

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The angry mobs of poor citizens take on a form of a powerful, forceful ocean that unpredictably sweeps through the Bastille. The mobs of people are compared to a sea that is rising when Dickens states "suddenly the sea rose immeasurably wider and higher." The'sea' comes out of nowhere and appears to be growing larger and without warning. The angry mobs of people were so forceful that Defarge was swept away by them. Dickens writes that "so resistless was the force of the ocean bearing him on…until he was landed in the outer courtyard of the Bastille." The comparison between the citizens and the ocean leads the reader to picture the angry people dragging Defarge along with them as if he were a grain of sand being tossed in the ocean's waves. Defarge found the'ocean' very chaotic and felt as though he was almost drowning "as if he had been struggling in the surf at the South Sea". The sea of people was so overpowering that Defarge felt he had no control of his body and was struggling to keeps his head above the mass of the mob. The connotative word "storm", is used to give characteristics to the'ocean' or the mob of people who are storming the Bastille. This shows that the people, like a storm, are moving in a strong, violent manner without anything in its path to stop it. Personification is also used to give the ocean living characteristics. Dickens writes, "so tremendous was the noise of the living ocean". This statement allows one to understand how overwhelming and loud the noise of the people was. The hundreds of people then swarmed the Bastille as if they were flooding it with their bodies. Charles Dickens compares the people to the "sea that rushed in". The sea is the mob of upset people. They moved fast and furiously into the courtyard as if to flood it. A mob of riotous people can be compared to a