Monday, August 19, 2019
Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens :: Great Expectations Essays
Great Expectations ââ¬â Charles Dickens ââ¬ËGreat expectationsââ¬â¢ is a novel written by Charles Dickens. He was interested in bringing about change and his novels dealt with such topics as justice and punishment, the widening gap between the rich and poor and so on. He believed that the divisions between the classes had produced a diseased and unhealthy society. During the Victorian society, women suffered many disadvantages. Women were dependent on men, unless they were rich. Women were expected to ââ¬Å"serveâ⬠and obey their husbands. In this novel the main character is Ms. Havisham. Miss Havisham is an eccentric wealthy old woman who lives in a manor house near Pipââ¬â¢s village, who has isolated herself to take her revenge on men because ââ¬ËCompeysonââ¬â¢, the bride groom who she is supposed to get married left her on the day the marriage was fixed. This resulted in Ms. Havishamââ¬â¢s isolation. With a kind of manic, obsessive cruelty, Miss Havisham adopts Estella and raises her as a weapon to achieve her own revenge on men. She has raised Estella to be the instrument of her revenge, training her to break menââ¬â¢s hearts. Ms. Havisham calls on for Pip, a little boy to play in her house. He is both the character, whose actions make up the main plot of the novel, and the narrator, whose thoughts and attitudes shape the readerââ¬â¢s perception of the story. Pip meets Estella, the proud and haughty adopted daughter of Miss Havisham. She delights in humiliating Pip, calling him a common laboring boy with coarse hands. She want to make Pip fall in love with Estella so that she can take her revenge. Ms. Havisham represents Dickens view of woman who did not perfectly fulfil their female role as well as the rich upper class who he saw as ââ¬Å"diseasedâ⬠. The way Ms. Havisham speaks and also the language used by Dickens gives the reader a clear picture of her. The language used to describe her is exaggerated and unrealistic as this is the situation in which we find her in. This essay will explore whether this character is really unrealistic or whether Dickens intends to show Ms. Havisham to be exaggerated for a certain reason. On Pipââ¬â¢s first visit to Ms. Havishamââ¬â¢s house, ââ¬ËSatis houseââ¬â¢, he observes a very old house which is barred. The house is made of ââ¬Ëold brick, and dismal, and had a great many iron bars to it.ââ¬â¢ There was a large brewery at the side of the house and it seemed that there was no brewing going on there for a long time. The windows are all walled up. This gives the impression that the house has been isolated from the
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