"It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to, than I have ever known"
About this Quote
Dickens doesn’t let Sydney Carton die as a punchline; he lets him die as a sentence with perfect balance. The famous doubling of “far, far better” is doing two jobs at once: it’s a drumbeat of resolve, and it’s a sly admission that Carton’s life has been defined by squandered potential. The line is self-judgment wrapped in self-forgiveness. Carton can’t rewrite his past, so he rewrites the scale on which his life will be measured: not by steady virtue, but by one moment of absolute moral clarity.
The genius is the grammar. “Thing” is deliberately vague, almost humble; it refuses heroic ornament. Dickens wants the act to feel inevitable rather than performative, as if redemption is less a spotlight than a door you walk through. Then he pivots from action to “rest,” turning execution into a kind of peace Carton has never had in life. The subtext is brutally modern: salvation isn’t portrayed as purity, but as relief from self-contempt.
In context, A Tale of Two Cities is obsessed with substitution: people swapped for lookalikes, identities traded, private lives swallowed by public terror. Carton’s sacrifice is the novel’s cleanest counterargument to the Revolution’s machinery of death. The guillotine reduces bodies to numbers; Carton insists one life can still mean something singular. Dickens lands the ending like a benediction, but it’s also a critique: a society so broken that the best life Carton can live is the one he gives away.
The genius is the grammar. “Thing” is deliberately vague, almost humble; it refuses heroic ornament. Dickens wants the act to feel inevitable rather than performative, as if redemption is less a spotlight than a door you walk through. Then he pivots from action to “rest,” turning execution into a kind of peace Carton has never had in life. The subtext is brutally modern: salvation isn’t portrayed as purity, but as relief from self-contempt.
In context, A Tale of Two Cities is obsessed with substitution: people swapped for lookalikes, identities traded, private lives swallowed by public terror. Carton’s sacrifice is the novel’s cleanest counterargument to the Revolution’s machinery of death. The guillotine reduces bodies to numbers; Carton insists one life can still mean something singular. Dickens lands the ending like a benediction, but it’s also a critique: a society so broken that the best life Carton can live is the one he gives away.
Quote Details
| Topic | Mortality |
|---|---|
| Source | Rejected source: Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens (Chesterton, G. K. (Gilbert Keith), 1936)EBook #22362
Evidence: a thud upon the floor above tells them that the heroines tyrannical father has died just in time to set her free that is the apotheosis of the pure heroic Other candidates (2) The Works of Charles Dickens: A tale of two cities (Charles Dickens, 1899) compilation97.3% Charles Dickens. ΕΧΡΙΑΤΙON . 437 " I see the lives for which I lay down my life , peaceful , useful ... It is a far ,... Charles Dickens (Charles Dickens) compilation35.7% not it cannot be laid aside it is not a thing to forget or hide it clings to the heart ah woe is me as the ivy clings... |
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