Dicken describes Madame Defarge as a woman who appears to see nothing yet takes notice of everything. What does she tend to focus on thus far?
Tee Goncalves
Madam Defarge is a woman who appears to see nothing yet takes notice of everything, but so far she tends to take notice on Dr. Manette and his daughter Lucie leaving the upstairs of the wine house where he was imprisioned for 18 years. As he is leaving with his daughter and her husband, she is pretending to knit and not hear anythingm but really she is evesdroping. So, she notices that Dafarge had forget his traveling paper, so she rushes to go get them for her husband.
Tee Goncalves
Madam Defarge is a woman who appears to see nothing yet takes notice of everything, but so far she tends to take notice on Dr. Manette and his daughter Lucie leaving the upstairs of the wine house where he was imprisioned for 18 years. As he is leaving with his daughter and her husband, she is pretending to knit and not hear anythingm but really she is evesdroping. So, she notices that Dafarge had forget his traveling paper, so she rushes to go get them for her husband.