<P> Charles Darnay, Charles D'Aulnais or Charles St. Evrémonde, is a fictional character in A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens . </P> <P> Darnay is a wealthy gentleman who spends time in both France and England during the time of the story . However, he resents how the lower classes are extorted and kept in extreme poverty by the upper class . Darnay specifically resents the views of his uncle, Marquis St. Evrèmonde, who has no respect for the people in poverty . He abandons his own family name in favor of his mother's, D'Aulnais, which he later alters to "Darnay"; relocating to London, he finds work as a tutor of French language and literature . </P> <P> Darnay is put on trial for treason against the Kingdom of Great Britain, but the key eyewitness testimony against him is undermined when his defense counsel directs attention to Sydney Carton, a barrister who has been assisting in the case . The two men bear a strong resemblance to one another, and Darnay is acquitted as a result . Later, Darnay succeeds his uncle as Marquis when the latter is stabbed to death in his sleep by a French revolutionary . Both Darnay and Carton express their love for Lucie Manette, but Darnay courts and marries her . As the French Revolution begins, Darnay is arrested and brought before a tribunal, where the crimes of his uncle and father are brought to light . He is sentenced to death by guillotine, but Carton takes his place so that he and his family can escape . </P> <P> In the 1935 Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer film adaptation, Charles Darnay is portrayed by Donald Woods . </P>

Who is executed at the end of a tale of two cities