"Never blame anyone in your life. Good people give you happiness. Bad people give you experience. Worst people give you a lesson. Best people give you memoirs" is a quote that I encounters many times in social media. This is exactly true for Pip, the main protagonist, of the legendary novel "Great Expectations." Pip's life is influenced by many characters either in a positive or negative way, and they molds Pip's heroic journey to become a gentleman at heart. From the kind and mysterious father figures and faithful friends to the cruel and cold female counterparts, Pip will not have the most important lesson at the end of the story.
In the second volume of the book, Pip crosses the threshold and he is now in a special world where he meets new father-figure Mr. Jaggers, his friend Herbert Pocket, Mr.Jagger's clerk Wemmick. Although Jaggers was straightforward with Pip, Pip regards him as his guardian. Herbert Pocket, on the other hand, helps Pip with his quest to become the gentleman and he was his ultimate friend-in-deed and he contrasts Pip in many ways such as Herbert's practical dream to become a merchant and marry his girlfriend to Pip's irrational rise in status and Ms.Havisham's wish for him to marry off with Estella. His encounter with Wemmick let Pip learn how a person can have an inner goodness beneath callous exterior. As Pip grows to become a gentleman, he becomes more snobbish and he starts to treat Joe badly and his minds and thoughts are only for Estella. Therefore, Estella, the bad character, in this stage, makes Pip forgets his roots and cause more strains on his life. Mrs. Joe death is one of the trial Pip went through and it makes Pip towards adulthood.
The third volume of the story is how Pip facing the supreme ordeal, and getting the reward and returning home safely. Pip is also greatly improved in this stage also by Pip's convict and benefactor Abel Magwitch. He was the secret benefactor of Pip, someone who is of lower class to Pip. Pip realization at this stage was huge. Magwitch wakes him up from a fairy tale and also let him see the true face of being a gentleman. In fact, Pip's view on the social status was all thrown upside down. Magwitch's example of how he was put into gravest troubles by a gentleman shocks Pip's earlier beliefs in the social status. I would like to point out that Magwitch is the biggest mentor in Pip's life as he appears in his most needed time of his attitudes towards life. Ms.Havisham last lesson Pip was her realization of her mistake towards Pip and that revenging does not let her have peace she acquires to have. Another character which shows him light towards the end of his story is Joe with his unrequited love and care at times Pip needs most.
The third volume of the story is how Pip facing the supreme ordeal, and getting the reward and returning home safely. Pip is also greatly improved in this stage also by Pip's convict and benefactor Abel Magwitch. He was the secret benefactor of Pip, someone who is of lower class to Pip. Pip realization at this stage was huge. Magwitch wakes him up from a fairy tale and also let him see the true face of being a gentleman. In fact, Pip's view on the social status was all thrown upside down. Magwitch's example of how he was put into gravest troubles by a gentleman shocks Pip's earlier beliefs in the social status. I would like to point out that Magwitch is the biggest mentor in Pip's life as he appears in his most needed time of his attitudes towards life. Ms.Havisham last lesson Pip was her realization of her mistake towards Pip and that revenging does not let her have peace she acquires to have. Another character which shows him light towards the end of his story is Joe with his unrequited love and care at times Pip needs most.
In conclusion, all the characters in Great Expectations Pip encounter helps Pip to achieve his main task, yet disguised greatly under the name "Great Expectations." Pip finally achieved the most important lesson which is "loyalty, love, and human affection are more important than
social class and material grandeur, and are the only goals worth striving for."
Works Cited
Works Cited
Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1942. Print.
SparkNotes Editors. “SparkNote on Great Expectations.” SparkNotes.com. SparkNotes LLC. 2007. Web. 26 May 2016.
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