Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles

A Tale of Two Cities (1859) is a novel almost obsessed with doubles and doubling. Dickens’s rhetoric in the novel is full of doubles, as is his imagery: mirrors, reflections, and echoes pervade the novel. The most obvious doubling—and perhaps the most important doubling in terms of plot—is the doubl...

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Main Author: Joel J. Brattin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2012-01-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12398
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author Joel J. Brattin
author_facet Joel J. Brattin
author_sort Joel J. Brattin
collection DOAJ
description A Tale of Two Cities (1859) is a novel almost obsessed with doubles and doubling. Dickens’s rhetoric in the novel is full of doubles, as is his imagery: mirrors, reflections, and echoes pervade the novel. The most obvious doubling—and perhaps the most important doubling in terms of plot—is the doubling of the central characters Sydney Carton and Charles Darnay. The physical similarity between these two young men allows Darnay to be released from mortal jeopardy in each of the two cities mentioned in Dickens’s title, most thrillingly in the novel’s final chapters. But my concern here is not with Darnay, but with Sydney Carton’s other doubles in A Tale of Two Cities. Utilizing close examination of the revisions in Dickens’s remarkable manuscript of the novel (now in the Forster Collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London), I consider several other figures that double Carton: Mr. Stryver, the ‘lion’ to Sydney’s ‘jackal’; Charles Dickens, Carton’s own creator; the innocent young seamstress who shares his fate at the guillotine in the final chapter; and finally—and perhaps most revealingly—Sydney Carton himself.
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spelling doaj-art-e298ec9ff52b437781ed23e82322926a2025-01-30T10:20:59ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492012-01-0110.4000/cve.12398Sydney Carton’s Other DoublesJoel J. BrattinA Tale of Two Cities (1859) is a novel almost obsessed with doubles and doubling. Dickens’s rhetoric in the novel is full of doubles, as is his imagery: mirrors, reflections, and echoes pervade the novel. The most obvious doubling—and perhaps the most important doubling in terms of plot—is the doubling of the central characters Sydney Carton and Charles Darnay. The physical similarity between these two young men allows Darnay to be released from mortal jeopardy in each of the two cities mentioned in Dickens’s title, most thrillingly in the novel’s final chapters. But my concern here is not with Darnay, but with Sydney Carton’s other doubles in A Tale of Two Cities. Utilizing close examination of the revisions in Dickens’s remarkable manuscript of the novel (now in the Forster Collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London), I consider several other figures that double Carton: Mr. Stryver, the ‘lion’ to Sydney’s ‘jackal’; Charles Dickens, Carton’s own creator; the innocent young seamstress who shares his fate at the guillotine in the final chapter; and finally—and perhaps most revealingly—Sydney Carton himself.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12398
spellingShingle Joel J. Brattin
Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
title Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles
title_full Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles
title_fullStr Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles
title_full_unstemmed Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles
title_short Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles
title_sort sydney carton s other doubles
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12398
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