A great example of Dickens' use of antithesis can be found in the novel's two main female characters: Lucie Manette and Lady Defarge. Lucie embodies a loving and nurturing, good-natured person who is genuinely concerned with the interests of others as well as herself. The love that fuels her also initiates her father's spiritual transformation and renewal. At the other end of the spectrum, Lady Defarge is hateful and bloodthirsty. She serves as proof that bloodshed only leads to oppression and that violence is a never-ending
A great example of Dickens' use of antithesis can be found in the novel's two main female characters: Lucie Manette and Lady Defarge. Lucie embodies a loving and nurturing, good-natured person who is genuinely concerned with the interests of others as well as herself. The love that fuels her also initiates her father's spiritual transformation and renewal. At the other end of the spectrum, Lady Defarge is hateful and bloodthirsty. She serves as proof that bloodshed only leads to oppression and that violence is a never-ending