As the result of this possibility, and the circumstantial evidence, Darnay is acquitted and allowed to go. Lorry, Lucie, and other witnesses give evidence that Darnay was traveling between England and France five years earlier.
Charles Darnay's secret is that his real name is Charles St. Evremonde and he is the heir to the title of Marquis St. Evremonde, the man who put Dr.
Manette in prison. We can assume that Sydney Carton is similar in age to Darnay because they are able to switch places at the end without anyone knowing. Answer and Explanation: When Charles is arrested and scheduled to die on the guillotine, with the potential of his wife, Lucie, and their daughter dying as well, Sydney. Who is being tried, and what is the charge against him?
Charles Darnay. He is charged with treason. He is accused of treason, or, as the court said: This constituted treason, or conspiring against the king, an offense that carried the dreadful punishment of being hanged, drawn, and quartered. Darnay sacrifices his freedom and privileges to be resurrected and unassociated with the cruel injustices of his uncle.
Lucie sacrifices her life to help resurrect her father, and Dr. Manette completes his own resurrection by showing Lucie the same love she has shown him. Darnay is condemned for his uncle's sins, but Sydney Carton out of love for Lucie Manette , disguises himself as Charles and takes his place in the guillotine and dies for him.
Darnay represents justice and duty, qualities inherited from his mother. He and his mother also stands for the members of the French aristocracy who were aware of the damage their families were inflicting, but who could do nothing to prevent it. That night, as he wanders the streets of Paris, Carton thinks of Lucie.
Manette reacts with shock and denies having ever denounced Darnay. Defarge then takes the stand and speaks of a letter that he found, hidden in North Tower of the Bastille.
SparkTeach Teacher's Handbook. Why is Charles Darnay acquitted at his English trial? How does Madame Defarge die? Why does Charles Darnay return to France after his marriage? Why was Dr. Manette imprisoned? Page 1 Page 2. After an hour and a half, the jury returns with a verdict — Darnay is innocent. Here we see another instance of a man being "recalled to life,"as Doctor Manette was in Book I.
Dickens describes Darnay as being a dead man, and the crowd, which buzzes like "a cloud of great blue-flies"would over a dead body, views him as such. The dead man is saved this time, not by Mr. Lorry or Lucie , but by an unlikely source — Sydney Carton, the disinterested and disreputable-looking lawyer who spends most of his time staring at the ceiling.
Carton's apparent lack of interest in his surroundings recalls Madame Defarge's attention to her knitting; both characters appear to see nothing, yet the reader senses that they notice more than most.
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