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    Sharon Verhoef‚ 1A Literature 1B The Symbolic Importance of Fire in Great Expectations Fire as a symbol can stand for a lot of different things. It represents warmth‚ understanding‚ desire and destruction. In Great Expectations fire is used repeatedly. In this novel fire plays a big role in making the reader understand more about the characters and the story. In the beginning of the novel fire is displayed as something warm and good. You can ask yourself the question “How can fire be essential

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    Great Expectations There is no single definition in the Victorian society as to what constitutes a “gentleman.” Even the Victorians themselves were unsure exactly what made a gentleman. Some believed it was a person’s central characteristics and others were not sure how long it would take to become one. Some people became gentleman from right of birth‚ but that alone was not enough. Others were considered gentleman because of their occupation‚ for example clergymen‚ army officers‚ and members

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    Great Expectation By: Charles Dickens Date of Publication 1861 ( In book form ) Pip - The protagonist and narrator of Great Expectations‚ Pip begins the story as a young orphan boy being raised by his sister and brother-in-law in the marsh country of Kent‚ in the southeast of England. Pip is passionate‚ romantic‚ and somewhat unrealistic at heart‚ and he tends to expect more for himself than is reasonable. Pip also has a powerful conscience‚ and he deeply wants to improve himself‚ both morally

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    Miss Havisham’s Revenge Although many aspects of revenge resemble the concept of justice‚ these choices do not only affect us as individuals‚ but everyone around us. In the novel‚ Great Expectations‚ Charles Dickens created the character Miss Havisham to portray the concept of revenge. Miss Havisham was left by her fiance at the altar‚ and from that moment on she devoted her life to make sure others felt her pain. She adopted a young girl named Estella and raised her to break men’s hearts

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    Great Expectations by Charles Dickens tells a story of a young boy named Pip who grew up in a lower class but slowly finds himself transforming into society’s view of a ’gentleman’ in order to gain the approval of Estella. Throughout the Novel many characters‚ such as Joe‚ Estella‚ and Magwitch provide Pip with a very important lesson; Your true friends will love and care for you no matter what happens or how much wrong you do to them. This life lesson Pip learns is one of the most important themes

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    Every author has his own style of writing. He may use an idea in one of his novels in another. In the books Great Expectations and Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens‚ the author uses descriptive plots‚ exiting characters‚ and a meaningful message to prove that two ideas in a book although similar can be presented differently. Throughout the plot of Great Expectations and Oliver twist‚ Dickens uses robbery to show the similarities and differences within the book. After a young child‚ Pip‚ visits

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    Moral Struggles of Great Expectations Pip is the main character of the novel desires to fulfil his expectations and the world he lives in does not gladly provide an easy way to his dream. Joe is his brother-in-law and his angry sister’s husband who treats Pip much better than her‚ just because he happens to have a bog heart. In the beginning of the novel‚ prior to Pip being exposed to the world he feels that he can satisfy his expectations‚ Joe and Pip are equals – the humbleness and loyalty that

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    Great Expectations - Charles Dickens: Part 1 Early Chapters Throughout these early scenes it is clear that there is a feeling of evil pervading. The evil comes not so much from Magwitch or even the ‘Terrible young man’ that Pip so fears as a young lad‚ but rather the presence of the gibbet and the nearby reference to the ‘hulks that appear “like a wicked Noah’s Ark.” It is a symbol of evil that is presently at hand as well as foreshadowing future ills. In this chapter we can see that the presence

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    benefactor is Miss Havisham‚ and believes he is being trained as Estella’s future husband. Pip’s happiness is unfathomable as he moves to London‚ away from the only family and friends he has ever known. He is educated by Mr. Mathew Pocket and strikes a great friendship with his son‚ Herbert. His wealth and position changes him‚ and soon Pip leads a dissipated life full of idleness. He is ashamed of Joe and Biddy‚ and wants little to do with them. He thinks association with them will lower him in Estella’s

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    Social class played a significant role in the universe depicted in Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations. Social class determined the manner in which a person was treated and their access to education. Yet‚ social class did not define the character of the individual. Characters were treated differently because of their social class in this novel. Seeing the contrast between how the poor and the rich were treated will give a clearer understanding of how much social class matter. In chapter 27 when

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