Tale Of Two Cities Rhetorical Analysis

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“While depicting the full picture of the revolution, Dickens carefully juxtaposes France and England” (Cubukcu). The opening paragraph of this novel, often cited by the hearts of many readers, has contributed much attention upon A Tale of Two Cities. In the first paragraph, Dickens deeds contrasting pairs with the use of parallelism and anaphoras of “best” and “worst”, “wisdom” and “foolishness”, “belief” and incredulity”, “Light” and “Darkness” and so forth to delineate the tensions between the aristocrats and peasants in both England and France; most importantly, he illustrates the French aristocrat’s brutality as well as their unjust autocracy-like rule over peasantry. The main message that Dickens is trying to convey is that aristocracy