Topic > Your Sacrifice is Your Salvation - 729

Your Sacrifice is Your SalvationThe novels contain testaments told within ragged pages, binding spines, breathless words, all according to the influence of theme and development. The complexity of a story cannot be recovered or understood except by starting from the simplest elements that constitute its thematic importance. Since this is nothing more than a proclaimed truth, it is taken for granted that the themes of a narrative are the skeletal system as the parchment serves as the skin, the central core towards which, without foundation, the entire system crumbles into a mass . A Tale of Two Cities is a work of great depth, although its fundamental seed is none other than the importance of rebirth through sacrifice. This overarching theme is ingrained in each character born from its roots, wrapped beneath its branches. Dickens has woven into each of them this sacrifice, this rebirth, the fall - the rise - which moves not only through the plot, the passages and the influence of heavy words, but also as factors that define these characters, the ones who they lend more emotion – without which our story seems insufficient. One need not look further to see evidence of a rebirth than that of Doctor Manette, Sydney Carton and his counter Charles Darnay – who over the course of the novel are shaped and reformed before the reader's eyes. through the actions in which they take part. Yet we must also look at these rebirths, at the sacrifice, at the gift that endowed them with the ability to change and evolve, to inspire. Doctor Manette at the moment of presentation is nothing more than a shell of a man, emptied, lost in the chambers of his mind, without release, tasked as a slave to his shattered conscience, capable only of performing the same simple task, broken at the world - unaware of the outside. The processes of his imprisonment are ... middle of paper ... then think of them as the same people - as you are shaped by their experiences. In every moment, the breath, captive or free, that I builds, transforms, distorts with its sinister or gentle intent - so in every moment, the character is reborn, with every word it is shaped, it is formed, and the reader must understand to know it again, slide to that level and try to understand. Sacrifice, however small, can bring about these little rebirths - but it takes a sacrifice more than a drop - a ripple - the rebirth of the self to a considerable degree - to form the element, the driving force wanted, necessary, like the one that pushes through the passages of the novel. In the end, in full or not, the three we met, that we followed, are not the ones we met. Dr. Manette, Sydney Carton and Charles Darnay - changed, different men - needed new perspectives and introductions.