7 seconds sound clip from the A Tale of Two Cities (1938) classic radio drama series episode.
You can hear this line at 00:07:06.233 in the radio play.
Quote context
[...]
- The two brothers crossed the road from a dark corner and identified me.
- Not a word was spoken.
- That coach brought me here to the Bastille. It brought me to my grave.
- If it had pleased God to put it in the hard heart of either of the brothers, in all these frightful years, to grant me any tidings of my dearest wife and my child...
- So much as to let me know by a word whether they are alive or dead, I might have thought that he had not quite abandoned them.
- But now I believe that the mark of the Red Cross is fatal to them, and that they have no part in his mercies.
- And them, and their descendants, to the last of their race, I, Alexandre Manette, unhappy prisoner, do, this last night of the year 1767, in my unbearable agony, denounce them to heaven and to earth.
- The words are written, in scrapings of soot mixed with blood, on scraps of crumbling paper. There they lie hidden away in the solid stone, year after year.
- Now in the North Tower, cell number 105 is heard all day, a low, hammering sound.
- The sound of an old man making shoes in the dark.
- One day, after eighteen years, the sound stops, and for a while North Tower cell number 105 is empty.
[...]
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