Dead or Alive Sydney Carton, from the novel Tale of Two Cities, sacrifices himself so that Charles and Lucie can live happily together. Carton made the ultimate sacrifice by taking Charles place to be beheaded at the guillotine. Just as Sydney gave his all for his cause, in similar ways Osama Bin Laden did the same. Sydney Carton and Osama Bin Laden share similar traits that helped their cause and have affected society through sacrifice. “Osama was exposed very early on his age to this experience but he lost his father when he was 13”(pbs). Osama’s father demanded that the boys needed to show confidence at a young age, so when his father had past he was already considered a man. Married at 17 and a degree in public administration, Osama was everything his father had hoped him to be. “He went back to the kingdom and started lobbying with his …show more content…
“‘Are you dying for him?’ she whispered. ‘And his wife and child. Hush! Yes.’ ‘O you will let me hold your brave hand, stranger?’”( Dickens 631). The Seamstress recognizes that Sydney has taken Charles place to be killed, she begins to adore him because of his heroic act. Sydney gave up his opportunity to marry the love of his life, Lucie and instead gave his life for her happiness. Sydney thought of himself as a Christ-like figure because of his sacrifice. Carton a foolish hero shows how love for one's cause can cause you to take your own life. Osama Bin Laden showed great persistence in pursuing his religious beliefs. Bin Laden believed in radical Muslim ideals that not all Muslims believe in or follow. Osama Bin Laden is known to most Americans as a monster and terrorist. Many AMericans only see him for his actions against America. Very few people see Bin Laden for his persistence and drive for what he believed in. Although his coordinated attacks killed and injured thousands, he gave his life to what he thought was
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.
Carton has given up his own life to give Lucie and a child whom he’s never met a better life. A main theme in A Tale of Two Cities is loyalty, and Sydney Carton’s loyalty seems to lie with not only Lucie, but with everyone but himself.
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
Osama Bin Laden, seventeenth son among fifty brothers and sisters, was born on 1957 in Saudi Arabia. Mohammed Awad Bin Laden, Osama Bin Laden’s father, was a rich man who owned a large construction company. His family’s company was the largest in the kingdom of King Saud from Saudi Arabia. After Mohammed built a good relationship with the royal family, the king issued a decree that all construction projects should go to Bin Laden. As his father was having a good jog in the kingdom, Osama had his primary and secondary education in Jeddah. In Osama’s early years, age 13, he experienced the loss of his father, who had
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.
Everyone knows who Osama Bin Laden is and about his horrendous lasting impact on our country and our planet, but have you ever wondered why someone would do something so awful? Osama Bin Laden became the world’s most wanted man because of his early life education, the forming of Al Qaeda, and his attacks on the United States in 2001. Bin Laden grew up in a good, very successful home, and then moved onto one of the most prestigious high schools in Jedda and was very successful. It was through an exclusive Islamic study group with a teacher where Osama learned “the principles of violent jihad” and that the Arab world should go by those rules “even if it meant supporting death and destruction” (Osama bin laden). These extreme views may have never
In the melodramatic novel, A Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens, the author uses the theme sacrifice. He shows that sacrifice is important in his story because some of his characters must give up their lives for another. Miss Pross dedicates herself to Lucie because she wants Lucie to have a brighter future than she did. Then, out of his love and devotion for Lucie Manette, Sydney Carton sacrifices his life to save a life she loves. The sacrifices Miss Pross and Sydney Carton make express that mankind will give everything for what they love and believe in.
Osama Bin Laden was once the most feared and influential terrorist in the Middle East. Born in Saudi Arabia, and raised as a devout Muslim, he began to question whether or not Western Civilization is a religiously acceptable thing. Once a multi-millionaire, Bin Laden gave up all his wealth in order to lead a new terrorist force. He killed thousands, forcing Muslim extremist values onto the people of the Middle East. He was leader and founder of the powerful terrorist group Al-Qaeda, orchestrator of the 9/11 attacks and made it on FBI’s most wanted list. Was he actually a religious hero, a holy warrior, a man of god? What separates Bin Laden from the many other people who have fought for what they believe is right?
In A Tale of Two Cities, written by Charles Dickens, Sydney Carton is introduced as a lethargic alcoholic that has little interest in living. As the story progresses, however, Dickens shows Sydney’s interest in another character named Lucie. Later, Sydney even announces his love to her before she weds another man, Charles Darnay, yet he still continues to speak of the worthlessness of his life as the story continues. It becomes very obvious to the reader that Lucie is the focal point of Sydney’s life, and that he lives primarily in the light of her happiness. Towards the end of the novel, Darnay is in prison and soon facing the guillotine. Sydney, who looks stunningly similar to Darnay, takes his place and dies to ensure Lucie’s happiness with Darnay in their future. From the time he announced his love to Lucie until his death, Sydney showed his passionate interest and care for Lucie while showing apathy for his own life. It is clear that Sydney valued Lucie and her happiness more than his own life. Therefore, by
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.
The most prominent theme in A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens is “rebirth through sacrifice”. Many characters in the novel show examples of this, but the most notable character that displays this theme is modest Sydney Carton. In the novel, Carton goes through three notable stages in his character and and disposition. Carton begins as a lowly drunk who allows others to exploit and demean him, to a man who lives with a devastating and unrequited love for a woman he can not have, to a humble and almost Christ-like martyr.
Sydney Carton walks through the streets and repeats the following words spoken by the priest at his father’s funeral, “These solemn words, which had been read at his father’s grave, arose in his mind...“I am the resurrection and the life, saith the Lord: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in me, shall never die” (3.9.323). These words are foreshadowing that he will sacrifice himself for Lucy as Christ sacrificed himself. Sydney is symbolizing Jesus, an innocent man sacrificing himself for the ones he loves. Carton loves Lucy so much that he will sacrifice himself so that she can live with Charles.
One way he mirrored Jesus is that he was willing to sacrifice himself for someone else. He died so that Charles Darnay could have a second chance at life. Charles was on death row because the revolutionaries did not like his family. Sydney Carton did not like the thought of this so he swapped places with Darnay. This is very similar to what Jesus did for us because we as humans deserved to die on the cross. Jesus chose to swap places with us so we would not have to die an eternal death in hell, but so we could live with him in Heaven. This is our second chance at life. The second way Sydney Carton is similar to Jesus is that he died out of his love for someone else. Sydney Carton did not die just because he wanted to save Darnay. After Mr. Stryver gave up trying to propose to Lucie, Carton visited Lucie and confessed his love for her. He said that even if she loved him back, he would only make her miserable. He let her know that if something bad were to occur to her or her family, he would willingly give his life her and her family. This is exactly what Jesus did for us. We were condemned to an eternity in hell away from God like Lucie would have been away from Charles, but Sydney Carton like Jesus loved Lucie enough to not put her through that pain, just like Jesus could not let us go through an eternity in hell. The third and final way Sydney Carton symbolized Jesus in this novel is that he could make no sense of his life
In A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens’ thorough development of each character and skillful use of coincidence prevents anyone from fading into insignificance; every character in the novel plays a role vital to the evolution of the plotline. Perhaps more impressive than his ability to place every single character in a significant role, Dickens uses the element of surprise to introduce the magnitude of various roles. Sydney Carton, in particular, seems to play a rather insignificant part in much of the novel, resulting from his self-admitted worthlessness. Carton’s continual and somewhat irritating self-criticism primes him for a surprising acquisition of influence at the conclusion; an inconsequential life becomes the novel’s hero in an ending which few anticipate. Carton expresses regret over his unfruitful life multiple times, agonizing over the idea of not having the opportunity to alter it. Dickens creates a final set of circumstances that are traumatic for much of the novel’s characters; Carton, however, sees the situation as the perfect chance to finally do something meaningful with his life. In an ironic yet sensible twist, the only way Carton can redeem his wasted life is by losing it. In light of the nature of his life up to the conclusion of the novel, he does not merit the Christ figure label until his final act of sacrifice. Charles Dickens unexpectedly transforms a wretched Sydney Carton into a symbol of Christ through the character’s displays of selflessness,
Terrorists or transnational criminals are not limited to members of foreign intelligence agencies, militant groups, or insurgents, but they now also consist of university students and business executives (Gebhardt, 2004). Some criminals and terrorist come from well-to-do families or high-status jobs. For example, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab also known as the “underwear bomber” attempted to harm approximately 300 individuals aboard Northwest Airlines Flight 253 because he stated that he had been directed by al Qaeda to do so. Abdulmuttallab was from a wealthy family, had opportunities to study at various universities, and had the support of his family members; however, he chose to involve himself in terrorist activities instead of furthering his education or maintaining a peaceful lifestyle.