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Great Expectations 2
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As a bildungsroman, Great Expectations presents the growth and
development of Pip, whose life twists and turns. Pip's two most
important traits are his immature, romantic idealism and his innately
good conscience. On the one hand, Pip tends to expect more for himself
than what is reasonable, and he desires to reinvent himself and rise to
a higher social class. After receiving his mysterious fortune, his
idealistic wishes seem to have been justified, and he gives himself over
to a gentlemanly life of idleness. In general, Pip’s fantasy of
self-improvement involves three forms: moral, social and educational.
When he behaves wretchedly toward Joe and Biddy, he feels guilty and
desires to be a good man; when he meets Estella, he longs to be a
wealthy gentleman; when he realizes he is an ignorant country boy, he
yearns to be erudite. As the saying goes, “ Life is like a box of
chocolates,you never know what you are going to get.” Pip has great
expectations about his future, because he believes in the possibility of
advancement in life and tries to figure out his own destiny. On the
other hand, in essence, Pip has a hidden conscience which can be
witnessed in his numerous acts of kindness throughout the book, for
example, he secretly buys Herbert's way into business and struggles to
protect Magwitch from the police. In the end, when sophistication is
revealed as a shallow and superficial value because it does not lead to
Pip achieving anything, he returns to his hometown. After all these
life-changing events, Pip learns that sincerity and kindness are the
simplest but the most valuable things of a real gentleman. Pip’s
experience also provides Dickens the opportunity to gently satirize the
class system of his era and to make a point about its capricious nature.
By using irony, the author explores the class system of Victorian
England from the lower to the upper class. For instance, Drummle is a
lazybone of upper class, while Magwitch, a convict, knows how to be
grateful and hardworking. Industrial civilization widens the gap between
the rich and the poor, and the hypocritical faces of the rich are
exposed under the unfair social background. We can come to a conclusion
that one's value has nothing to do with his social status. Social class
is like an invisible shackle which constrains personal development and
deforms self-awareness. In all, life is full of ups and downs, and we
need to stay sober in both. When pursuing a better life, bear in mind
that inner worth is always more important than wealth.
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