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    Chapter 36 - Page 2

    Triumph
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    might have thought that the usual order of things was reversed, and that the felons were trying the honest men. The lowest, cruelest, and worst populace of a city, never without its quantity of low, cruel, and bad, were the directing spirits of the scene: noisily commenting, applauding, disapproving, anticipating, and precipitating the result, without a check. Of the men, the greater part were armed in various ways; of the women, some wore knives, some daggers, some ate and drank as they looked on, many knitted. Among these last, was one, with a spare piece of knitting under her arm as she worked. She was in a front row, by the side of a man whom he had never seen since his arrival at the Barrier, but whom he directly remembered as Defarge. He noticed that she once or twice whispered in his ear, and that she seemed to be his wife; but, what he most noticed in the two figures was, that although they were posted as close to himself as they could be, they never looked towards him. They seemed to be waiting for something with a dogged determination, and they looked at the Jury, but at nothing else. Under the President sat Doctor Manette, in his usual quiet dress. As well as the prisoner could see, he and Mr. Lorry were the only men there, unconnected with the Tribunal, who wore their usual clothes, and had not assumed the coarse garb of the Carmagnole.

    Charles Evremonde, called Darnay, was accused by the public prosecutor as an emigrant, whose life was forfeit to the Republic, under the decree which banished all emigrants on pain of Death. It was nothing that the decree bore date since his return to France. There he was, and there was the decree; he had been taken in France, and his head was demanded.

    "Take off his head!" cried the audience. "An enemy to the Republic!"

    The President rang his bell to silence those cries, and asked the prisoner whether it was not true that he had lived many years in England?

    Undoubtedly it was.

    Was he not an emigrant then? What did he call himself?

    Not an emigrant, he hoped, within the sense and spirit of the law.

    Why not? the President desired to know.

    Because he had voluntarily relinquished a title that was distasteful to him, and a station that was distasteful to him, and had left his country--he submitted before the word emigrant in the present acceptation by the Tribunal was in use--to live by his own industry in England, rather than on the industry of the overladen people of France.

    What proof had he of this?

    He handed in the names of two witnesses; Theophile Gabelle, and Alexandre Manette.

    But he had married in England? the President reminded him.

    True, but not an English woman.

    A citizeness of France?

    Yes. By birth.

    Her name and family?

    "Lucie Manette, only daughter of Doctor Manette, the good physician who sits there."

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