Characters inside a book are like dominos, when something happens to one, it’s a chain reaction. C.J.Stryver is the first domino in a secondary plot within a Tale of Two Cities . C.J.Stryver is a lawyer and a family friend of the Manettes. Although his character isn’t overwhelmingly important, his associate is. Sydney Carton may start out seeming like a cold-hearted drunk, but at the end of the story you realize he is, in fact, the true hero of this story. The statement “C.J. Stryver would have been a successful lawyer without the help of Sydney Carton” is in fact an incorrect one, for many reasons. At the beginning of A Tale of Two Cities the readers are introduced to Sydney Carton and C.J.Stryver. Sydney seems like an unkind drunk but in reality he was just a misunderstood man with a kind and compassionate heart. At the end of the story Mr. Carton gives his life for Charles Darnay. Mr. Carton has a good heart and truly cares about people, being a good trait for lawyers to possess. On the opposite end of the spectrum his associate C.J.Stryver seems like a very kind and nice man. After Lucy Manette gets proposed to my Mr. Stryver, it’s revealed that he has a nasty temper. It would be difficult to work with a lawyer who has a bad temper. Knowing information about these two characters allows the reader …show more content…
Carton truly cares about people's relative feelings, it would be easier for a client to connect and understand with Carton. If a client realizes that Stryver had a bad temper they might have issues with working with him. If the two men partner on different projects then it would be beneficial for Mr. Stryver to work with Carton. This is a huge reason why Stryver would not have been such an amazing lawer if it weren’t for Sydney. If clients hadn’t worked with Sydney at one point they may have changed to a different lawyer and left Carton behind. Because Mr. Carton has a true heart of gold he helped Mr. Stryver connect with his clients, hence being a better
In the book Tale of Two Cities, the main character, CJ Stryver is a lawyer that is very disliked by almost everyone. His friend, Sydney Carton is also a lawyer but is more likable. When Sydney carton decided to work with CJ Stryver it was good for the clients because Sydney was easier to deal with. Given their two different personalities, it is clear that CJ Stryver would not have been a successful lawyer without the help of Sydney Carton. One reason he wouldn't have been successful is that he is not a man of honor and nobody likes a man that is not honorable. Another reason that they were successful together is because they were complete opposites and they picked up on what the other one lagged. Additionally they were successful because they already had past chemistry so they knew each other pretty well.
Lastly, good did triumph over evil in Sydney Carton. Sydney Carton is a drunk who hates Darnay because if Carton was not a drunk he would have everything Darnay has, like the love of Lucie Manette. Carton is seen as the darkness because of the disparity he has and how low he has fallen. Whereas Darnay is seen as light or the good guy due to how his life is going. In the end when Sydney gives up his life for Darnay it shows how Sydney is transferring from being sad and dark. His selfless act proved that the “bad” Sydney Carton has saved Darnay and kept Lucie, Cartons love, happy.
Sydney Carton, “one of Dickens’s most loved and best-remembered characters” (Stout 29), is not just another two-dimensional character; he seems to fly off the pages and into real life throughout all the trials and tribulations he experiences. He touches many hearts, and he even saves the life of Charles Darnay, a man who looks surprisingly similar to him. In Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities, Sydney Carton is a selfish man of habit, a cynic, a self-loathing drunk, and an incorrigible barrister until he meets Lucie Manette; throughout the novel Sydney is overcome by his noble love for Lucie and transforms from a cynic to a hero as he accomplishes one of the most selfless acts a man can carry out.
A tale of two cities begins in 1775 when Mr. Jarvis Lorry goes to fetch Lucy Manette to visit her father, who has been imprisoned for her whole life. The Manettes meet Charles Darnay Stryver, and Sydney Carton at a legal trial they are witnesses to, where Darnay is accused of being a spy. Sydney Carton, the lawyer wins the case by pointing out the court cannot prove it was Darnay. Here we learn Darnay and
Sydney Carton is an alcoholic. He is not a well dressed man for being a lawyer. Carton is extremely unhappy. Although he was a known drunkard he proves to be a hero as the story
Charles Dickens’ extensive use of foil characters in A Tale of Two Cities also includes the duo of Mr. Stryver and his business partner, Carton. Although the characters in the novel are spaced apart among various chapters, meaning certain characters only appear on occasion, the few scenes involving both Carton and Stryver undeniably indicate their status as foils. Both Carton and Stryver wish to marry Lucie Manette, although they go about it in much different ways. Carton, “the fellow of no delicacy,” obtains a personal discussion with Lucie, in which he, already defeated, acknowledges the hopelessness of his situation (148-153).
Similar to Jarvis Lorry, Sydney Carton undergoes a transformation of character. When Carton is first introduced in book one he is a pitiful lawyer, an “idlest and most unpromising man,”(Dickens 78). In chapter five he is displayed as an “amazingly good jackal,”(Dickens 79), meaning that he is “content and apathetic towards the fact that he will never be accredited with the performance and outcomes of his actions,”(Trojan, Kara). However, Lucie Manette inspires redemption in Carton through love, for he knows that if he can save her in any way then he can absolve his misery and find a purpose for his years on Earth. When Lucie Manette’s husband is punished to death row, Carton is determined to keep his promise. Carton takes the place of the spouse
A Tale of Two Cities, written by Charles Dickens, takes place during the French Revolution. The book centers on the heroic attempts of Sydney Carton and Charles Darnay. Sydney Carton puts on the façade of being insolent and indifferent, but his true nature is expressed in the book when he puts others first, defends Charles, and dies for the ones he loves. Charles Darnay is a once wealthy aristocrat whose attempts at heroism include going back to France, his financial sacrifice, and the noble way in which he was willing to face his death.
Sydney Carton's life is made meaningful by the hope that he receives from Lucy Manette. At the beginning of the story, Sydney Carton's life has no significance. He is a drunkard with a seemingly worthless life. Sydney is working as a clerk for the lawyer C.J. Stryver, and though Sydney is the real brains behind the ideas, the attorney receives all the credit. Carton has had an unfavorable life and has no inspiration, nothing to live for. Sydney really wants for his life to have served some purpose, for him to have made a difference. He changes his life around after a conversation with Miss Manette in which Carton professes his love to her. Carton
Sydney Carton is the most memorable character in Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities, a story of redemption, resurrection, self-sacrifice change and love, all of these words have to do with the extreme transformation of. Sydney Carton had such great love for Lucie Mannette that evolves from a depressed loaner that can only attempt to substitute happiness with alcoholic indulgence to a loyal caring friend who makes the ultimate sacrifice for the ones he loves.
In A Tale of Two Cities, there are two characters, which are identified as lawyers. C.J. Stryver is one lawyer, and Sydney Carton is another lawyer. C.J Stryver was an arrogant, egotistical man who believed he was the best lawyer that existed. Sydney Carton was a succesfull lawyer, who did not like to be in the spotlight. So C.J. Stryver would not have been a successful lawyer without the help of Sydney Carton.
As the novel progresses, he develops a love for Lucie Manette and makes a promise to do anything in his power for her, even if that is risking his life. He knows that one day his promise will come into play, and his life will finally be executed. Sydney Carton is compared to a jackal against Stryver, who is considered a lion, because Carton provides all of the information to maintain Stryver’s reputation. This jackal and lion relationship is illustrated when Dickens observes, “.. that although Sydney Carton would never be a lion, he was an amazingly good jackal, and that he rendered suit and service to Stryver in that humble capacity” (65). Sydney Carton is a very smart man who does not say much, but grasps important information.
Sydney Carton, the alcoholic aid of an attorney is able to break out of his depressing shell and fulfill his promise to Lucie Manette by the end of A Tale of Two Cities. He shows himself as the true hero of the novel and shines over all the other characters that were “recalled to life” (7). The ultimate sacrifice, to give up one’s life, should be rewarded as the most heroic action in any situation out of good
In A Tale of Two Cities, Sydney Carton is the clear protagonist of the book. This normally would make the antagonist (however there is no clear one) his antithesis. Yet straying from the norm, Dickens creates a very peculiar opposite for Carton in the form of Jarvis Lorry. Lorry is a man of business, and will not be strayed from his financial past even by an encroaching revolution. Carton on the other hand is a bleeding heart romantic hero, who is motivated by love and passion. To complicate the entire ordeal further, both Carton and Lorry are fighting for the same side. The different personalities of the characters play vital roles in the outcome of the book as well as the outcome of the revolution.
Charles Darnay and Sydney Carton have pretty much in common, as well as their similar appearances and their love for Lucie. They even have terribly several variations as well as their backgrounds and attitudes. However, in the end, the reader finishes up having the