Miss Pross

E948342

Miss Pross is a fiercely loyal and protective English servant in Charles Dickens's "A Tale of Two Cities," best known for her unwavering devotion to Lucie Manette and her pivotal role in confronting Madame Defarge.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Miss Pross canonical 1

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Englishwoman
fictional character
literary character
servant
appearsIn A Tale of Two Cities NERFINISHED
appearsInMedium novel
associatedPlace England NERFINISHED
France NERFINISHED
London NERFINISHED
Paris NERFINISHED
associatedWith Madame Defarge NERFINISHED
becomes deaf
caresFor Doctor Manette household
caretakerOf Lucie Manette NERFINISHED
characterTrait brave
fiercely loyal
patriotic
protective
self-sacrificing
stubborn
confronts Madame Defarge NERFINISHED
consequenceOfEvent loses her hearing
contrastedWith Madame Defarge NERFINISHED
createdBy Charles Dickens NERFINISHED
employer Doctor Manette NERFINISHED
Lucie Manette NERFINISHED
event struggles with Madame Defarge in Paris
firstAppearance A Tale of Two Cities NERFINISHED
gender female
hasMoralFunction embodies personal loyalty and sacrifice
injuredBy Madame Defarge NERFINISHED
languageOfWork English
literaryPeriod Victorian literature
loyalTo Lucie Manette NERFINISHED
nationality English
occupation servant
protectiveOf Lucie Manette NERFINISHED
relationshipToLucieManette companion GENERATED
servant GENERATED
surrogate aunt GENERATED
roleInPlot prevents Madame Defarge from denouncing the Darnays
protects Lucie Manette and her family from Madame Defarge
supports Charles Darnay NERFINISHED
symbolizes ordinary heroism
unselfish love
workPublicationYear 1859

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.