The biography and Charles Dickens's creativity
Introductory
Charles Dickens was born
on February 7, 1812, and spent the first nine years of his life living in the coastal
regions of Kent, a county in southeast England. Dickens’s father, John, was a
kind and likable man, but he was incompetent with money and piled up tremendous
debts throughout his life. When Dickens was nine, his family moved to London.
When he was twelve, his father was arrested and taken to debtors’ prison.
Dickens’s mother moved his seven brothers and sisters into prison with their
father, but she arranged for the young Charles to live alone outside the prison
and work with other children pasting labels on bottles in a blacking warehouse.
Dickens found the three months he spent apart from his family highly traumatic.
Not only was the job itself miserable, but he considered himself too good for
it, earning the contempt of the other children. After his father was released
from prison, Dickens returned to school. He eventually became a law clerk, then
a court reporter, and finally a novelist. His first novel, The Pickwick Papers, became a huge popular
success when Dickens was only twenty-five. Great Expectations was first published as a
weekly series in 1860 and in book form in 1861. Early critics had mixed
reviews, disliking Dickens' tendency to exaggerate both plot and characters,
but readers were so enthusiastic that the 1861 edition required five printings. It was set in early Victorian England, a time when great social changes were
sweeping the nation. The Industrial Revolution of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries had transformed the social landscape, enabling capitalists and
manufacturers to amass huge fortunes. Although social class was no longer
entirely dependent on the circumstances of one’s birth, the divisions between
rich and poor remained nearly as wide as ever. More and more people moved
from the country to the city in search of greater economic opportunity.
Throughout England, the manners of the upper class were very strict and
conservative: gentlemen and ladies were expected to have thorough classical
educations and to behave appropriately in innumerable social situations. These conditions defined Dickens’s
time, and they make themselves felt in Great Expectations. Pip, the novel’s protagonist, lives in the marsh country, works at a
job he hates, considers himself too good for his surroundings, and experiences
material success in London at a very early age, exactly as Dickens himself did.
In addition, one of the novel’s most appealing characters, Wemmick, is a law
clerk, and the law, justice, and the courts are all important components of the
story. Pip’s sudden rise from country laborer to city gentleman forces him to
move from one social extreme to another while dealing with the strict rules and
expectations that governed Victorian England. Ironically, this novel about the
desire for wealth and social advancement was written partially out of economic
necessity. In form, Great Expectations fits a pattern popular in nineteenth-century European fiction depicting
growth and personal development, generally a transition from boyhood to manhood
such as that experienced by Pip. I have read the Russian version of this book and I
liked the plot very much. Then I read it in original version. I especially
liked the way author showed Pip’s growth from little boy to a gentleman, also
his feelings, changes in his outlooks. The part where he starts to realize that
social class or money do not matter, when one has no human values and
qualities, is my favorite part in the novel. After reading this book I analysed
and uncovered new life-situations for us, the young, and came to the conclusion
that in spite of the importance of education, proper behavior, it is not less
important to gain and maintain certain values and stay true to them throughout
the whole life.
Plot
On
Christmas Eve of 1812, Pip, a boy aged 7, encounters an escaped convict in the
village churchyard while visiting his mother and father's and younger brothers'
graves. The convict scares Pip into stealing food for him and a file to grind away his leg
shackles. He threatens Pip not to tell anyone and do as he says or his friend
will cut out Pip's heart and liver. Pip returns home, where he lives with Mrs.
Joe (whose name is later revealed to be Georgiana Maria), his older sister, and
her husband Joe Gargery. His sister is very cruel and beats him as well as her
husband with various objects regularly; however Joe is much kinder to Pip. She
was the one who "brought him up by hand". Early the next morning, Pip
steals food and drink from the Gargery pantry (including a pie for their
Christmas feast) and sneaks out to the graveyard. It is the first time in Pip’s
life he’s felt truly guilty. This is an important event in the book because the
convict will never forget the kindness (albeit forced) that Pip showed to him.
The convict, however, waits many years to fully show his gratitude. During
Christmas dinner with the minister Dan, Mr. Wopsle, Mr. and Mrs. Hubble, and
Uncle Pumblechook, Pip and Mrs. Joe's moderately wealthy uncle, no one notices
the missing food or brandy until Uncle Pumblechook drinks some brandy and spits
it out. Pip realizes that he filled the brandy jug not with water, but with
tar-water, (a foul tasting tonic made of pine tar and water often used for
medicinal purposes), instead. He had brought some of the brandy to the convict
and had to replace it somehow. Pip sits at the table being told how lucky he is
by all the relatives all the while in fear that someone will notice the missing
pie. However, the moment his sister goes to the pantry to retrieve the pie and
discovers it is missing. Soldiers approach the house and ask Joe to repair
their handcuffs and invite Joe, Pip and Mr. Wopsle to come with them to hunt
for some escaped prisoners from the local jail. As they hunt through the
marshes outside the village, they accost two convicts while engaged in a fight.
One of them is the convict helped by Pip; the convict freely confesses to the
theft of the file and "some whittles" of food in order to shield Pip.
The police take the two to the Hulk, a giant prison ship, and Pip is carried
home by Joe, where they finish Christmas dinner. A while after Pip’s encounter
with the convict, Pip's life returns to normal. He continues to attend the
local school which is run by Mr. Wopsle's great-aunt, and becomes friends with
Biddy, an orphan who was adopted by the Wopsles; even though no more was said
of the incident with the convict and he has been absolved of any wrong doing,
he still feels guilty for the theft. A wealthy old woman named Miss Havisham
asks Pip's Uncle Pumblechook to find a boy of a certain age and bring him to
her home to play. Pumblechook immediately selects Pip and brings him to Miss
Havisham's, who lives in the village in Satis House. Miss Havisham is a
spinster who wears an old wedding dress with one shoe on and has all the house
clocks stopped at 20 minutes to nine. She hasn't seen sunlight in years and
claims to have a broken heart and just wants to see Pip play cards with
Estella, a young girl she has adopted.
Pip's
first encounter with Miss Havisham and Estella is a strange one. He discovers
Miss Havisham is a shut-in who has boarded up the windows around the entire
house so as not to allow any light in. She remains seated in a tattered chair
where she instructs Pip to play cards with Estella. Here, Estella is cruel to
Pip, calls him names and laughs at him. Miss Havisham seems to delight in this
ill-treatment of Pip and asks him repeatedly what he thinks of Estella in turn
by whispering it in her ear. Miss Havisham continuously praises Estella for her
pride and her beauty. Hurt and angry, Pip leaves Satis House to walk the
grounds and cries. Estella brings him food however she begins to make fun of
him again as she sees that he has been crying and teases him for doing so.
Outside, Pip is accosted by a young man of about the same age who tries to
engage him in a fight. He calls Pip out but Pip refuses to fight with him at
first, however, after this has gone on for a time, Pip swings at and strikes
the young man, knocking him to the ground. The young man repeatedly encourages
Pip to hit him even though he is clearly losing and becoming increasingly
battered and bloody. After the fight is over, the two part ways; Estella, having
seen the fight, lets Pip kiss her, excited that two young men are fighting for
her, and he returns to the forge. Pip's first
encounter with Miss Havisham and Estella is a strange one. Pip
realizes that he is in love with Estella. Pip behaves badly in society (mostly over jealousy of
Estella) and squanders his allowance, running into debt. He is rescued on his
21st birthday, when he is notified by Jaggers that he is awarded 500 pounds
(equal to £36,000 today) and an increased steady allowance, until such a
time as his benefactor will appear and make himself known to Pip. Pip
originally believes Miss Havisham is his benefactress. For several
years Estella had been studying abroad in Europe. Upon her return, Pip finds
Estella much changed and her attitude refined. She apologizes for her earlier
cruelty however, seeing Pip's affections warns him that he should not fall in
love with her. Pip ignores these repeated warnings as he long harbored the
belief that Miss Havisham (as his benefactress) intended them for each other.
Estella continues to warn him that her heart is cold and cannot love him and
entreats him to take her seriously, but he refuses, still believing they will
be married and that her heart is not as cold as she claims. During this time, Mrs. Joe dies. Pip's benefactor turns
out to be instead Abel Magwitch, the convict whom Pip helped, who had been
transported to New
South Wales, where he had eventually prospered
and become extremely wealthy. Magwitch left all his money to Pip in gratitude for that kindness and
also because Pip reminded him of his own child, whom he believes to have been
killed by her mother over two decades prior. However, Magwitch now
expects to spend the rest of his life living with Pip in England. Pip, very
reluctantly, lets Magwitch stay with him. There is a warrant out for Magwitch's arrest in England and he will be
hanged if he is caught in the country. Pip becomes increasingly suspicious of
being watched and tells his landlord and all other close people that Magwitch
is an uncle by the name of Provis. During these events, it is
revealed to Pip that Estella is the daughter of Mr. Jaggers' housemaid, Molly,
whom he defended in a murder charge and who gave up her daughter to be adopted
by another of his clients, Miss Havisham, in return for his service in allowing
her to be acquitted of the charge. Pip later realizes Magwitch is Estella's
father. Shortly before Magwitch and Pip are scheduled to flee, Pip receives an
unsigned note at his home telling him to appear at the marshes near his old
home that night at 9pm. Pip is timid at first, but the letter mentions his
"Uncle Provis" and threatens his safety. Pip is lured in by the
threats to his benefactor and leaves for the village by carriage immediately.
On the marshes, Pip is struck on the head by a blunt object, rendering him
unconscious for a period of time. When he awakens, he finds himself bound in a
small shack far away from any other residences. It is revealed that both the
author of the anonymous note and his attacker is Orlick, who admits that he was
in fact the one who attacked Mrs. Joe. Orlick confides that he intends to kill
Pip as he was always jealous of young Pip when he worked with Joe and for Pip's
intervention with his advances on Biddy. Pip is sure he is going to die though
he refuses to cry out or beg for mercy. Pip is rescued by Herbert, a village shop boy . Meanwhile, out of spite for Miss Havisham, Estella has married Bentley
Drummle, a boastful rival of Pip's whom he very much dislikes. Pip, Herbert and another friend, Startop, make a gallant
attempt to help Magwitch escape, but instead he is captured and sent to jail. Pip
is devoted to Magwitch by now and recognizes in him a good and noble man and is
ashamed that he had formerly looked down on Magwitch as his inferior. Pip tries
to have Magwitch released but Magwitch dies shortly before his execution. Under
English law Magwitch's wealth forfeits to the Crown, thus extinguishing Pip's
"Great Expectations". During an extended period of sickness, Pip is
nearly arrested for his numerous unpaid debts to several creditors however due
to his condition, which includes fever, he is not arrested at that time. During
this illness, he is looked after by Joe and he eventually returns to good
health. Joe leaves early one morning leaving Pip with only a note of
well-wishes, believing that as Pip had not visited him in years since, he would
not visit him then and that he likely would never see Pip again. Pip is greatly
saddened by this turn of events and realizes how thankless and ungrateful he
had been over the years. His guilt is compounded by the discovery that the
police did not leave to allow Pip time to recover, but because Joe had paid all
of his debts in full. Pip returns home to ask Biddy and Joe for forgiveness and
to thank Joe for his unprovoked kindness, and unfailing love for which Pip felt
unworthy. When he arrives in the village, he finds that it is Biddy and Joe's
wedding day. He congratulates the couple, Afterwards,
Pip goes into business overseas with Herbert. After eleven relatively
successful years abroad, Pip goes back to visit Joe and the rest of his family
out in the marshes. Pip meets Estella on the streets. Her abusive husband Drummle has died.
Estella and Pip exchange brief pleasantries and Pip states that while he could
not have her in the end, he was at least glad to know she was a different
person now, changed from the coldhearted girl Miss Havisham had reared her to
be. The novel ends with Pip saying he could see that "suffering had been
stronger than Miss Havisham's teaching and had given her a heart to understand
what my heart used to be.
Characters
Pip - Great Expectations presents the growth and development of
a single character, Philip Pirrip, better known to himself and to the world as Pip. Pip is by far the most important character
in Great Expectations: he is both the protagonist,
whose actions make up the main plot of the novel, and the narrator, whose thoughts
and attitudes shape the reader’s perception of the story. Because Pip is narrating his story many
years after the events of the novel take place, there are really two Pips in Great Expectations: Pip the narrator and Pip the character—the voice telling the story and the
person acting it out. Dickens takes great care to distinguish the two Pips, imbuing the voice of
Pip the narrator with perspective and maturity while also imparting how Pip the
character feels about what is happening to him as it actually happens. This skillfully
distinction is perhaps best observed early in the book, when Pip the character is
a child; here, Pip the narrator gently pokes fun at his younger self, but also enables
us to see and feel the story through his eyes. As a character, Pip’s two most important traits are his immature, romantic
idealism and his innately good conscience. On the one hand, Pip has a deep desire
to improve himself whether educationally, morally, or socially. His longing to marry Estella
and join the upper classes stems from the same idealistic desire as his longing
to learn to read and his fear of being punished for bad behavior: once he understands
ideas like poverty, ignorance, and immorality, Pip does not want to be poor, ignorant,
or immoral. Pip the narrator judges his own past actions extremely harshly, rarely giving
himself credit for good deeds but angrily castigating himself for bad ones. As a
character, however, Pip’s idealism often leads him to perceive the world rather
narrowly, and his tendency to oversimplify situations based on superficial values
leads him to behave badly toward the people who care about him. When Pip becomes
a gentleman, for example, he immediately begins to act as he thinks a gentleman
is supposed to act, which leads him to treat Joe and Biddy snobbishly and coldly. On the other hand, Pip is at heart a very
generous and sympathetic young man, a fact that can be witnessed in his numerous
acts of kindness throughout the book (helping Magwitch, secretly buying Herbert’s
way into business, etc.) and his essential love for all those who love him. Pip’s
main line of development in the novel may be seen as the process of learning to
place his sense of kindness and conscience above his immature idealism. The fact that he comes to admire Magwitch
while losing Estella to the brutish nobleman Drummle ultimately forces him to realize
that one’s social position is not the most important quality one possesses, and
that his behavior as a gentleman has caused him to hurt the people who care about
him most. Once he has learned these lessons, Pip matures into the man who narrates
the novel, completing the novel.
Estella - Often cited as Dickens’s first convincing
female character, Estella is a supremely ironic creation, one who darkly undermines
the notion of romantic love and serves as a bitter criticism against the class system
in which she is mired. Raised from the age of three by Miss Havisham , Estella wins
Pip’s deepest love by practicing deliberate cruelty. Unlike the warm, winsome, kind
heroine of a traditional love story, Estella is cold, cynical, and manipulative.
Though she represents Pip’s first longed-for ideal of life among the upper classes,
Estella is actually even lower-born than Pip; as Pip learns near the end of the
novel, she is the daughter of Magwitch, the coarse convict, and thus springs from
the very lowest level of society. Rather than being raised by Magwitch, a man of
great inner nobility, she is raised by Miss Havisham, who destroys her ability to
express emotion and interact normally with the world. And rather than marrying the
kindhearted commoner Pip, Estella marries the cruel nobleman Drummle, who treats
her harshly and makes her life miserable for many years. In this way, Dickens uses
Estella’s life to reinforce the idea that one’s happiness and well-being are not
deeply connected to one’s social position: had Estella been poor, she might have
been substantially better off. Despite her cold behavior and the damaging influences in her life, Dickens
nevertheless ensures that Estella is still a sympathetic character. By giving the
reader a sense of her inner struggle to discover and act on her own feelings rather
than on the imposed motives of her upbringing, Dickens gives the reader a glimpse
of Estella’s inner life, which helps to explain what Pip might love about her. Estella
does not seem able to stop herself from hurting Pip, but she also seems not to want
to hurt him; she repeatedly warns him that she has “no heart” and seems to urge
him as strongly as she can to find happiness by leaving her behind. Estella’s long, painful marriage to Drummle
causes her to develop along the same lines as Pip—that is, she learns, through experience,
to rely on and trust her inner feelings. In the final scene of the novel, she has
become her own woman for the first time in the book. As she says to Pip, “Suffering
has been stronger than all other teaching. . . . I have been bent and broken, but—I
hope—into a better shape.”
Miss Havisham - a wealthy dowager who lives in a rotting mansion and wears an old wedding
dress every day of her life, is not exactly a believable character, but she is certainly
one of the most memorable creations in the book. Miss Havisham’s life is defined
by a single tragic event: her jilting by Compeyson on what was to have been their
wedding day. From that moment forth, Miss Havisham is determined never to move beyond
her heartbreak. She stops all the clocks in Satis House at twenty minutes to nine,
the moment when she first learned that Compeyson was gone, and she wears only one
shoe, because when she learned of his betrayal, she had not yet put on the other
shoe. With a kind of manic, obsessive cruelty, Miss Havisham adopts Estella and
raises her as a weapon to achieve her own revenge on men. Miss Havisham is an example
of single-minded vengeance pursued destructively: both Miss Havisham and the people
in her life suffer greatly because of her quest for revenge. Miss Havisham is completely
unable to see that her actions are hurtful to Pip and Estella. She is redeemed at
the end of the novel when she realizes that she has caused Pip’s heart to be broken
in the same manner as her own; rather than achieving any kind of personal revenge,
she has only caused more pain. Miss Havisham immediately begs Pip for forgiveness,
reinforcing the novel’s theme that bad behavior can be redeemed by contrition and
sympathy.
Abel Magwitch (“The Convict”) - a fearsome criminal, Magwitch escapes from prison at the beginning of Great Expectations and terrorizes Pip in the cemetery. Pip’s
kindness, however, makes a deep impression on him, and he subsequently devotes himself
to making a fortune and using it to elevate Pip into a higher social class. Behind
the scenes, he becomes Pip’s secret benefactor, funding Pip’s education and opulent
lifestyle in London through the lawyer Jaggers.
Jaggers - The powerful, foreboding lawyer hired by Magwitch to supervise Pip’s elevation
to the upper class. As one of the most important criminal lawyers in London, Jaggers
is privy to some dirty business; he consorts with vicious criminals, and even they
are terrified of him. But there is more to Jaggers than his impenetrable exterior.
He often seems to care for Pip, and before the novel begins he helps Miss Havisham
to adopt the orphaned Estella. Jaggers smells strongly of soap: he washes his hands
obsessively as a psychological mech-anism to keep the criminal taint from corrupting
him.
Mrs. Joe - Pip’s sister and Joe’s wife, known only as “Mrs. Joe” throughout the novel.
Mrs. Joe is a stern and overbearing figure to both Pip and Joe. She keeps a spotless
household and frequently menaces her husband and her brother with her cane, which
she calls “Tickler.” She also forces them to drink a foul-tasting concoction called
tar-water. Mrs. Joe is petty and ambitious; her fondest wish is to be something
more than what she is, the wife of the village blacksmith.
Joe Gargery - Pip’s brother-in-law, the village blacksmith, Joe stays with his overbearing,
abusive wife—known as Mrs. Joe—solely out of love for Pip. Joe’s quiet goodness
makes him one of the few completely sympathetic characters in Great Expectations. Although he is uneducated and unrefined, he consistently acts for the benefit
of those he loves and suffers in silence when Pip treats him coldly.
Bentley Drummle - An unpleasant young man who attends tutoring sessions with Pip at the Pockets’
house, Drummle is a minor member of the nobility, and the sense of superiority this
gives him makes him feel justified in acting cruelly and harshly toward everyone
around him. Drummle eventually marries Estella, to Pip’s chagrin; she is miserable
in their marriage and reunites with Pip after Drummle dies some eleven years later.
Themes,
Symbols & Motifs
Ambition
and Self-improvement
The
moral theme of Great Expectations is quite simple: affection, loyalty, and conscience
are more important than social advancement, wealth, and class. Dickens establishes
the theme and shows Pip learning this lesson, largely by exploring ideas of ambition
and self-improvement—ideas that quickly become both the thematic center of the novel
and the psychological mechanism that encourages much of Pip’s development. At heart,
Pip is an idealist; whenever he can conceive of something that is better than what
he already has, he immediately desires to obtain the improvement. When he sees Satis
House, he longs to be a wealthy gentleman; when he thinks of his moral shortcomings,
he longs to be good; when he realizes that he cannot read, he longs to learn how.
Pip’s desire for self-improvement is the main source of the novel’s title: because
he believes in the possibility of advancement in life, he has “great expectations”
about his future.
Ambition and self-improvement take three
forms in Great Expectations—moral, social, and educational; these
motivate Pip’s best and his worst behavior throughout the novel. First, Pip desires
moral self-improvement. He is extremely hard on himself when he acts immorally and
feels powerful guilt that spurs him to act better in the future. When he leaves
for London, for instance, he torments himself about having behaved so wretchedly
toward Joe and Biddy. Second, Pip desires social self-improvement. In love with
Estella, he longs to become a member of her social class, and, encouraged by Mrs.
Joe and Pumblechook, he entertains fantasies of becoming a gentleman. The working
out of this fantasy forms the basic plot of the novel; it provides Dickens the opportunity
to gently satirize the class system of his era and to make a point about its capricious
nature. Significantly, Pip’s life as a gentleman is no more satisfying—and certainly
no more moral—than his previous life as a blacksmith’s apprentice. Third, Pip desires
educational improvement. This desire is deeply connected to his social ambition
and longing to marry Estella: a full education is a requirement of being a gentleman.
As long as he is an ignorant country boy, he has no hope of social advancement.
Pip understands this fact as a child, when he learns to read at Mr. Wopsle’s aunt’s
school, and as a young man, when he takes lessons from Matthew Pocket. Ultimately,
through the examples of Joe, Biddy, and Magwitch, Pip learns that social and educational
improvement are irrelevant to one’s real worth and that conscience and affection
are to be valued above erudition and social standing.
Social
Class
Throughout Great Expectations, Dickens explores the class system of Victorian
England, ranging from the most wretched criminals (Magwitch) to the poor peasants
of the marsh country (Joe and Biddy) to the middle class (Pumblechook) to the very
rich (Miss Havisham). The theme of social class is central to the novel’s plot and
to the ultimate moral theme of the book—Pip’s realization that wealth and class
are less important than affection, loyalty, and inner worth. Pip achieves this realization
when he is finally able to understand that, despite the esteem in which he holds
Estella, one’s social status is in no way connected to one’s real character. Drummle,
for instance, is an upper-class lout, while Magwitch, a persecuted convict, has
a deep inner worth.Perhaps the most important thing to remember about the novel’s
treatment of social class is that the class system it portrays is based on the post-Industrial
Revolution model of Victorian England. Dickens generally ignores the nobility and
the hereditary aristocracy in favor of characters whose fortunes have been earned
through commerce. Even Miss Havisham’s family fortune was made through the brewery
that is still connected to her manor. In this way, by connecting the theme of social
class to the idea of work and self-advancement, Dickens subtly reinforces the novel’s
overarching theme of ambition and self-improvement.
Crime,
Guilt, and Innocence
The
theme of crime, guilt, and innocence is explored throughout the novel largely through
the characters of the convicts and the criminal lawyer Jaggers. From the handcuffs
Joe mends at the smithy to the gallows at the prison in London, the imagery of crime
and criminal justice pervades the book, becoming an important symbol of Pip’s inner
struggle to reconcile his own inner moral conscience with the institutional justice
system. In general, just as social class becomes a superficial standard of value
that Pip must learn to look beyond in finding a better way to live his life, the
external trappings of the criminal justice system (police, courts, jails, etc.)
become a superficial standard of morality that Pip must learn to look beyond to
trust his inner conscience. Magwitch, for instance, frightens Pip at first simply
because he is a convict, and Pip feels guilty for helping him because he is afraid
of the police. By the end of the book, however, Pip has discovered Magwitch’s inner
nobility, and is able to disregard his external status as a criminal. Prompted by
his conscience, he helps Magwitch to evade the law and the police. As Pip has learned
to trust his conscience and to value Magwitch’s inner character, he has replaced
an external standard of value with an internal one.
Symbols. Satis House
In
Satis House, Dickens creates a magnificent Gothic setting whose various elements
symbolize Pip’s romantic perception of the upper class and many other themes of
the book. On her decaying body, Miss Havisham’s wedding dress becomes an ironic
symbol of death and degeneration. The wedding dress and the wedding feast symbolize
Miss Havisham’s past, and the stopped clocks throughout the house symbolize her
determined attempt to freeze time by refusing to change anything from the way it
was when she was jilted on her wedding day. The brewery next to the house symbolizes
the connection between commerce and wealth: Miss Havisham’s fortune is not the product
of an aristocratic birth but of a recent success in industrial capitalism. Finally,
the crumbling, dilapidated stones of the house, as well as the darkness and dust
that pervade it, symbolize the general decadence of the lives of its inhabitants
and of the upper class as a whole.
The Mists
on the Marshes
The
setting almost always symbolizes a theme in Great
Expectations and always sets a tone that
is perfectly matched to the novel’s dramatic action. The misty marshes near Pip’s
childhood home in Kent, one of the most evocative of the book’s settings, are used
several times to symbolize danger and uncertainty. As a child, Pip brings Magwitch
a file and food in these mists; later, he is kidnapped by Orlick and nearly murdered
in them. Whenever Pip goes into the mists, something dangerous is likely to happen.
Significantly, Pip must go through the mists when he travels to London shortly after
receiving his fortune, alerting the reader that this apparently positive development
in his life may have dangerous consequences.
Bentley
Drummle
Although
he is a minor character in the novel, Bentley Drummle provides an important contrast
with Pip and represents the arbitrary nature of class distinctions. In his mind,
Pip has connected the ideas of moral, social, and educational advancement so that
each depends on the others. The coarse and cruel Drummle, a member of the upper
class, provides Pip with proof that social advancement has no inherent connection
to intelligence or moral worth. Drummle is a lout who has inherited immense wealth,
while Pip’s friend and brother-in-law Joe is a good man who works hard for the little
he earns. Drummle’s negative example helps Pip to see the inner worth of characters
such as Magwitch and Joe, and eventually to discard his immature fantasies about
wealth and class in favor of a new understanding that is both more compassionate
and more realistic.
Motifs. Doubles
In Great Expectations,perhaps the most visible
sign of Dickens’s commitment to intricate dramatic symmetry—apart from the knot
of character relationships, of course—is the fascinating motif of doubles that runs
throughout the book. From the earliest scenes of the novel to the last, nearly every
element of Great Expectations is mirrored or doubled at some other point in
the book. There are two convicts on the marsh (Magwitch and Compeyson), two invalids
(Mrs. Joe and Miss Havisham), two young women who interest Pip (Biddy and Estella),
and so on. There are two secret benefactors: Magwitch, who gives Pip his fortune,
and Pip, who mirrors Magwitch’s action by secretly buying Herbert’s way into the
mercantile business. Finally, there are two adults who seek to mold children after
their own purposes: Magwitch, who wishes to “own” a gentleman and decides to make
Pip one, and Miss Havisham, who raises Estella to break men’s hearts in revenge
for her own broken heart. Interestingly, both of these actions are motivated by
Compeyson: Magwitch resents but is nonetheless covetous of Compeyson’s social status
and education, which motivates his desire to make Pip a gentleman, and Miss Havisham’s
heart was broken when Compeyson left her at the altar, which motivates her desire
to achieve revenge through Estella. The relationship between Miss Havisham and Compeyson—a
well-born woman and a common man—further mirrors the relationship between Estella
and Pip.This doubling of elements has no real bearing on the novel’s main themes,
but, like the connection of weather and action, it adds to the sense that everything
in Pip’s world is connected. Throughout Dickens’s works, this kind of dramatic symmetry
is simply part of the fabric of his novelistic universe.
Comparison
of Characters to Inanimate Objects
Throughout Great Expectations, the narrator uses images of inanimate objects
to describe the physical appearance of characters—particularly minor characters,
or characters with whom the narrator is not intimate. For example, Mrs. Joe looks
as if she scrubs her face with a nutmeg grater, while the inscrutable features of
Mr. Wemmick are repeatedly compared to a letter-box. This motif, which Dickens uses
throughout his novels, may suggest a failure of empathy on the narrator’s part,
or it may suggest that the character’s position in life is pressuring them to resemble
a thing more than a human being. The latter interpretation would mean that the motif
in general is part of a social critique, in that it implies that an institution
such as the class system or the criminal justice system dehumanizes certain people.
dickens reporter chapter
Conclusion
Are Great Expectations and ambitions always
destined for everyone? In Great Expectations, the central recurring theme is that
affection, loyalty, and inner worth is more important than a progressive increase
in wealth and social status. Dickens makes this theme evident through the interactions
of the characters, and by discovering the idea of wealth and self-improvement (specifically
in social classes). The thesis can be discovered in situations such as Pip's awareness
of his harsh treatment toward his loved ones, the loyalty that Joe and Biddy continued
to have toward Pip, and the emptiness in the life of Estella Therefore, by investigating
specific characters and their occurrences with each other it can become quite evident
that the theme of loyalty; happiness; and love over wealth is clearly displayed
through the novel. At a certain point in the novel Pip came to understand that affection and
loyalty is more important than wealth and social status. For example, When Pip came to know that
he had inherited a big fortune and that it was destined for him to become an honorable
gentleman; he quickly packed for London and left the Forge without saying a proper
good-bye. Although, in London when Pip got a very high fever and became ill it was
Joe who came back and nursed Pip back to health and even paid off all of his remaining
debts. This made Pip realize that even though he was tight and unkind to Joe, Joe
still came back and took care of Pip while the rest of his money-hungry "friends"
forgot about him. In addition, when Magwitch arrives at London he tells Pip that
he is His benefactor. Full of affection and love towards Pip, Magwitch continues
to tell Pip how he was the only thing in his life worth living for. Meanwhile, Estella asks Pip to forgive
her, he does, and all is well. So the story ends, with grown Pip and a changed Estella
both at peace with each other. In conclusion, I thought that this was a very well
written book. It took me a while to get into it and understand the plot, but now
I see that Dickens wrote Great Expectations with a very complex plot and well described
characters. From Joe Gargery to Miss Havisham, I really got to know the characters
as if they were people. Every scene in the book felt like real, true to life. Besides,
this book highlights actual problems of this century, like staying true to ones
principles, trusting people, having the desire to prosper mentally, spiritually.
I would describe this book as a delightful story with a sprinkle of mystery and
a handful of romance, with a pinch of fun all mixed in. This may be one of the most impressive books
I have ever read. It tells the story of a young boy who becomes a man; it shows
our Pip (his name) as he truly was. I mean, the author never justified his behaviour,
not even when he was weak and offensive. Pip is not a hero, he is just human being.
He is not a criminal either, you can say he didn't do anything extraordinary such
as save the world nor invent the light bulb. In change, he grew in compassion and
gratitude. With him we learn the "worst sides of the human nature"; he
loses his fortune, but at the end he accomplishes his "Great Expectations".
Literature list
1.
Charles Dickens «Great Expectations».
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