The guillotine, chaos, bloodshed. Charles Dickens had a hard life that inspired him to spin a bleak, historical tale known as A Tale of Two Cities. Dr. Manette is a doctor who suffered an imprisonment of eighteen years. His son-in-law goes by the name Charles Darnay but is actually from a family line wanted dead in France. Then there’s Sydney Carton- an unmotivated, negative man who decides to change his ways. In A Tale of Two Cities the author Charles Dickens uses the recovery of Dr. Manette, the sacrifice of Sydney Carton, and the cover up of Charles Darnay to contribute to the theme of the novel that rebirth is possible.
Entering the story, Dr. Manette was being sheltered by Defarge in France, in a psychotic trance. He was wrapped in confusion and hammering away at a shoemaker’s bench, miles away from recovery. But through his daughter Lucie’s marriage to Charles Darnay, he begins to …show more content…
But when Darnay begins to struggle throughout his trials, Carton is behind the scenes plotting and remembering crucial details about various spy’s. During his big plan that involves saving Darnay from death; Carton says, “I am the resurrection and the life, saithe the lord: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die” (Dickens 380). Carton is about to find rebirth through the guillotine, as he drugged Darnay so as to switch places and take the fall. He feels that standing strong and dying like a man, is the way to right the life he lived shrouded. Sydney is described as feeling enlightened, and his faith in god suggests looking forward to a productive life in heaven. Darnay never welcomed him, so this is Sydney’s best way to tell Lucie that he loved her and implement himself as part of the