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    which better portrays Pip’s feelings more effectively than he could have with words. Later on in the book Dickens again uses the mists to represent Pip’s feelings of uncertainty. While Pip is visiting Miss Havisham‚ he appears to be reluctant to play cards again‚ but willing to “work”‚ so Miss Havisham tells him to go wait in another room for her. One of his observations on this mysterious room is that there was a

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    used to go to London and become a gentleman. Pip assumed that Ms. Havisham‚ Estella’s adoptive mother‚ was the benefactress. "My dream was out; my wild fancy was surpassed by sober reality; Miss Havisham was going to make my fortune on a grand scale." (154) This was the reality that Pip had invented for himself‚ although it was really just a misimpression that his mind had created for himself. Because he thought that Ms. Havisham was his benefactress‚ Pip anticipated that Estella was meant for him

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    Duffy‚ writing from the twentieth century perspective‚ revisits the well known character from Great Expectations in a dramatic monologue‚ where she assumes the persona of Havisham to explore the innermost thoughts and feelings of a bitter woman destroyed by unrequited love and humiliation. Havisham appears to be written in the style of a Shakespearean sonnet‚ but does not end in a rhyming couplet‚ only continues in this style. This symbolises that there is no happy ending for Havisham and thoughts

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    with his sister‚ Mrs. Joe‚ and her husband‚ Joe and is best friends with a beautiful‚ smart girl named Biddy. He lives a happy childhood with his apprentice‚ Joe‚ until one day Uncle Pumplechook invites him to “play” at Miss Havisham’s house. Miss Havisham is a rich‚ victimized woman who wears her wedding dress from the day her fiancée abounded her at the alter. This is the beginning of Pip’s new adventure of life. Pip instantly falls in love with Estella even though she is very cruel to him. Estella

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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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    Valentine ‘Valentine’ is a controversial love poem written by Carol Ann Duffy. Throughout the poem the poetess compares love to an onion and she does that by using a variety of techniques such as imagery‚ symbolism‚ word choice and structure. All these techniques justify why Valentine is an unusual love-poem as they help the poet express her different point of view. Overall‚ the poem is unusual as its title mistakenly leads the reader into thinking that the poem will be typical. I felt deeply moved

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    Compare the presentation of Lady Macbeth and Miss Havisham. Explore how Shakespeare and Dickens present them as disturbed women. Disturbed is a definition of someone who has emotional or mental problems; both Lady Macbeth and Miss Havisham are presented as disturbed characters in one way or another. These two leading women both have characteristics that were not stereotypical of woman at the time periods that the play and the novel were set in; making them immediately appear strange to the audience

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    However upon receiving his expectations we see Pip acting in the same frivolous manner showing how easily he has been corrupted by money. Even before receiving his expectations Pip wishes to be a gentleman. This is only after spending time with Miss Havisham a rich woman who lives nearby. Joe Gargery is the opposite of Pip in this respect. Though he is only working class‚ and therefore wouldn’t have much money‚ he is uncorrupted by money and is the moral compass of the story. There are many points in

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    Dickens. Pip is an orphan boy who lives in Kent‚ England with his abusive sister‚ Mrs. Joe‚ and his sympathetic uncle‚ Joe Gargery. He searches for value as a person in becoming a gentleman and in earning the love of Estella‚ an orphan adopted by Miss Havisham‚ a wealthy spinster. Throughout his journey‚ Pip matures from having innocence to losing innocence‚ marking his change in character and expectations. In Great Expectations by Charles Dickens‚ Pip transforms when he encounters a convict‚ visits Satis

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    exceedingly boring (Shephard). A few of his coworkers were later personified in his later works (Shephard). John Dickens started a new job as a newspaper reported and quickly earned enough money to allow Charles to quit his job at the law firm and pursue his love for shorthand writing (Shephard). Dickens had a distinct interest in social reform‚ so he toured orphanages and factories and was subsequently horrified by the deplorable living conditions. Worried that such a rough upbringing would lead

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