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How Does Dickens Present Sydney Carton's Transformation

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In the Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens utilizes Sydney Carton to show the theme that love has transformative powers.
At the beginning of the novel Carton is presented as a lazy alcoholic who has no real prospects in life and doesn't seem to have any in the near future. However, as the novel progresses he reveals a versatile personality of nobility, loyalty, selflessness, and unconditional love for Lucie Manette. This love will transform him into a hero of sorts, fulfilling his potential he squanders working as background attorney for Stryer. Very early on, Carton’s negative outlook on life is expressed in the bar after the trial of Charles Darnay in England. Carton says to Charles in a drunken stupor, "I am a disappointed drudge, sir. …show more content…

As a result of his unceasing love for Lucie and his physical likeness with Darnay, he was able to switch places with him in prison before being brought to the block to be beheaded by the guillotine. Carton, through this final act, fulfilled the promise he made to Lucie. When Carton is in line for the Guillotine he meets a seamstress who asks "Are you dying for him?" He responds with "And his wife and child." After Carton's death the narrator says, "They said of him, about the city that night, that it was the peacefullest man's face ever beheld there. Many added that he looked sublime and prophetic.” Sydney found peace by knowing his life had a meaning and purpose. He sacrificing his life for Love. Doing so saved not only Lucie, but her child and Darney as well. This is the ultimate act of selflessness and the act of a composed loyal man. Neither of which Carton possessed at the beginning of the book. The closing lines of the novel stating, "It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known.” Carton turned his life from that of a relatively lost pathetic man into that of a hero. Sydney finally became a man of his words, fulfilled a promise and allowing him to rest in peace knowing he will live on in the hearts and inheritance of the person he died

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