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Literary Devices In A Tale Of Two Cities By Charles Dickens

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Charles Dickens employs many different literary devices to create more depth and meaning in A Tale of Two Cities. The contrast between characters and scenes help the reader understand that there are certain similarities and difference, which would otherwise be hard to interpret. By showing the reader that these similarities and differences have a deeper meaning, they are able to gain insight into the motivations of the characters or the unforeseen impacts of certain actions in the past. In A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens contrasts characters, locations, and philosophies to bring a greater meaning to the novel. Dickens contrasts the actions of the Revolution to those of the Aristocracy to show that neither act justly in the French Revolution. He depicts Monsieur Evremonde as the cruel and unfeeling nature of the Aristocracy. Evremonde runs over a child in the street and shows no remorse for the act; this shocks the reader due to Evremonde’s utter indifference to the lives of those in a lower social class than his own. His lack of any emotion in a situation where most people would show a deep amount of regret and sadness makes the reader feel distant from the Aristocracy. It establishes a theme of selfishness in the aristocrats throughout the novel. Later, it is found that Evremonde raped and killed a woman and murdered most of her family, and then he wrongfully accuses Doctor Manette of the deed and puts him in jail for 18 years. On the other hand, Dickens shows the

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