BLOG #3
In the novel "A Tale
of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens, in book 2, chapter 2, demonstrates a
courtroom scene to criticize the British legal system, with the Old Bailey
embodying the uncompromising harshness of the law. Charles Darnay’s case it particular
states the bloody nature of criminal sentences. If found guilty, he will be
drawn, half hanged, deprive while still alive, beheaded, and cut into pieces.
While such a sentence is horrible in itself, more disturbing is the avid
interest the courtroom spectators take in Darnay's fate. The man who describes
the sentence to Jerry speaks “with a relish” and the “eager faces” of the crowd
stare at Darnay with an “Ogreish” fascination. Dickens points out that such an interest
in a condemned man is “not the sort that elevated humanity.” As Dickens shows
repeatedly throughout the novel, crowds can bring out the basest natures of
people. Interestingly, the one thing capable of elevating the sensitivities of
the crowd is the sight of Lucie Manette’s concern and pity for the prisoner.
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