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19th-Century British Literature Videos 14 videos
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A Tale of Two Cities 53963 Views
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Description:
It may be the best of times for Chuck Darnay, but it's pretty much constantly the worst of times for Sydney. Poor guy.
Transcript
- 00:01
A Tale of Two Cities, a la Shmoop: It was the best of videos, it was the worst of videos.
- 00:12
Even if you haven't read Dickens' immortal classic A Tale of Two Cities...
- 00:15
...you're no doubt familiar with that opening line:
- 00:18
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."
- 00:22
How could it be the best of times and the worst of times... at the same time?
Full Transcript
- 00:28
What was Dickens trying to say here... or was he just trying to cover his butt?
- 00:34
Okay, considering that Dickens is one of the greatest writers who has ever lived...
- 00:39
...and taking into account that his opener is a pretty famous one...
- 00:43
...let's give him the benefit of the doubt and say that... he was likely trying to make
- 00:47
an important point here. But what?
- 00:52
Is he saying that it was the best of times for some, and the worst of times for others?
- 00:57
Dickens paints a picture with a pretty clear divide between the upper and lower classes.
- 01:02
One half of the population was the upper crust...
- 01:05
..while the other half had to settle for the upper crust's... crumbs.
- 01:11
Or is he insinuating that it's a matter of perception?
- 01:14
Some of the characters in this novel live in poverty, but are courageous, loyal, or
- 01:18
strong of heart.
- 01:20
Others... members of the aristocracy... live lavish existences, but are corrupt, unkind
- 01:26
or inhumane.
- 01:27
Were the folks Dickens writes about experiencing both the best of times and the worst of times...
- 01:33
simultaneously? Were their hearts full, but their stomachs
- 01:36
empty...
- 01:37
...or vice versa?
- 01:39
And why exactly were there so many empty stomachs... had these people never heard of Ramen noodles?
- 01:46
All right, so the line might be referring to a divide between the classes...
- 01:51
...or it could have to do with a sort of... duality of man...
- 01:54
...but consider a third option.
- 01:56
Maybe it doesn't have anything to do with people's lives at all.
- 02:01
Perhaps Dickens was commenting on the state of the world as a whole.
- 02:04
It was the worst of times, because the French Revolution was raging on, and evils such as
- 02:11
self-indulgence and brutality reared their nasty heads...
- 02:15
...but it was the best of times, because the human spirit rose up when faced with such
- 02:20
adversity and hardship...
- 02:22
...and remained strong even in the face of death.
- 02:25
And trust us... it's tough to be strong in the face of death. That is one ugly mug.
- 02:30
So... which way are you leaning?
- 02:33
Does Dickens' famous first line relate to the highs of the rich and the lows of the
- 02:38
poor...
- 02:38
...the differing perceptions of happiness that existed within each character in the
- 02:42
story...
- 02:43
...or to an all-encompassing assessment of the state of humankind?
- 02:48
Shmoop among yourselves.
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