Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Charles Dickens Great Expectations Essays -- Charles Dickens Great Ex
Charles Dickens' Great Expectations      One of Dickensââ¬â¢ most popular novels ââ¬ËGreat Expectationsââ¬â¢ is a griping  search for identity- the narratorââ¬â¢s self-identity Pip has been born  into a difficult world in the early years of the 19th Century. Philip  Pirrip is the narrator of ââ¬ËGreat Expectationsââ¬â¢. In the book he is  known as Pip. He called himself Pip because as a young child his  infant tongue could only get across to Pip. I the first few chapters  of the book he is described as a timid, sensitive and guilt-ridden  person. His parents had died earlier, probably due to poverty. Pip is  living with his sister, who intimidates him in every form. We realise  his intimidation when he arrives late from the graveyard,    ââ¬Å"I twisted the only button on my waistcoat round and round, and looked  in great depress at the fire. Tickler was a wax-ended piece of cane,  worn smooth by collision with my tickled frameâ⬠    I see a parallel between Dickens and Pip. Dickensââ¬â¢s lived in an  over-crowded place when he was young. His parents had no intentions of  sending him to school. He spent his days running errands and doing  chores around the house also his younger sister died of smallpox just  like, Pipââ¬â¢s brothers and sisters. Dickens was very concerned with  social issues like poverty. At the time when the book was written,  there was a very high level of infant mortality, which was made worse  by deaths among poor adults, hence the number of orphans.    The first meeting with Magwitch is in the churchyard, where Pip is  lost in childish absorption grappling with his familyââ¬â¢s fate. His  state of mind is very unstable when Pip is grabbed violently and the  convict threatened to cut his throat if he was to make noise. Pip  imagines Magwitch as a pir...              ...r. Pip felt, Estella looked down on him  because he was poor and not a gentleman. Pip was asked to play, but he  didnââ¬â¢t know how to ââ¬Ëplayââ¬â¢. Estella lived in a society where her class  did not have to work, and we read that Pip wanted to leave when he was  told to ââ¬Ëplayââ¬â¢ because he did not understand the word ââ¬Ëplayââ¬â¢.    In chapter 9, when Pip returns home his shame will not allow him to  tell the truth to his sister and Pumblechook so he is exaggerates. We  see that Pip is telling Joe about his real feelings about his trip to  ââ¬ËSatis Houseââ¬â¢. Unlike the theft, which he kept secret, he eventually  confides to Joe because he knows Joe will keep an open mind and he is  the only one person he can speak to without being punished and having  a guilty conscience. What he is confiding to Joe is his shame as a  working-class person and how he must change in order to win Estella.                      
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