Great Expectations.doc
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1、Great ExpectationsThis was Dickens second-to-last complete novel. It was first published as a weekly series in 1860 and in book form in 1861. Early critics had mixed reviews, disliking Dickens tendency to exaggerate both plot and characters, but readers were so enthusiastic that the 1861 edition req
2、uired five printings. Similar to Dickens memories of his own childhood, in his early years the young Pip seems powerless to stand against injustice or to ever realize his dreams for a better life. However, as he grows into a useful worker and then an educated young man he reaches an important realiz
3、ation: grand schemes and dreams are never what they first seem to be. Pip himself is not always honest, and careful readers can catch him in several obvious contradictions between his truth and fantasies. Victorian-era audiences were more likely to have appreciated the melodramatic scenes and the re
4、vised, more hopeful ending. However, modern critics have little but praise for Dickens brilliant development of timeless themes: fear and fun, loneliness and luck, classism and social justice, humiliation and honor. Some still puzzle over Dickens revision that ends the novel with sudden optimism, an
5、d they suggest that the sales of Dickens magazine All the Year Round, in which the series first appeared, was assured by gluing on a happy ending that hints Pip and Estella will unite at last. Some critics point out that the original ending is better because it is more realistic since Pip must earn
6、the self-knowledge that can only come from giving up his obsession with Estella. However, Victorian audiences eagerly followed the story of Pip, episode by episode, assuming that the protagonists love and patience would win out in the end. Modern editions contain both denouements for the reader to c
7、hoose a preference.Plot SummaryThe First Stage of Pips Expectations Charles Dickens Great Expectations opens as seven-year-old Philip Pirrip, known as Pip, visits the graves of his parents down in the marshes near his home on Christmas Eve. Here he encounters a threatening escaped convict, who frigh
8、tens Pip and makes him promise to steal food and a file for him. Pip steals some food from his brother-in-law, the blacksmith Joe Gargery, and his cruel sister Mrs. Joe, with whom he lives, and takes it to the convict the next day. The convict is soon caught and returned to the Hulks, the prison shi
9、ps from which he had escaped.Pip is invited to visit the wealthy Miss Havisham, and to play with her adopted daughter, Estella. Miss Havisham lives in the gloomy Satis House, and Pip discovers her to be an extremely eccentric woman. Having been abandoned on her wedding day many years earlier, Miss H
10、avisham has never changed out of her wedding dress since that time, and nothing in the house, including the rotting wedding cake covered with spider webs, has been touched since she discovered that her fiance had left her and had cheated her out of a great deal of money. Miss Havisham has raised Est
11、ella to be a cold and heartless woman who will avenge her adopted mother by breaking the hearts of men.Pip continues to visit Satis House to play with Estella, and he begins to fall in love with her, despite the fact that she is rude and condescending to him. Because of Miss Havishams interest in hi
12、m, Pips family and friends speculate on his future prospects, and Pip attempts to improve those prospects by asking his friend, the orphaned Biddy, to tutor him. Eventually, Miss Havisham gives Pip some money, tells him his services are no longer needed, and that it is time for him to be apprenticed
13、 to his brother-in-law, Joe. Pip is disappointed.One day Pip learns that someone has broken into his home and that his sister, Mrs. Joe, has been injured with a great blow to the back of the head. Biddy moves in to help take care of her and the household and continues to tutor Pip, with whom she is
14、falling in love. Biddy believes that it was Orlick, a contemptuous employee of Joes, who injured Mrs. Joe. Biddy also fears that Orlick is falling in love with her. Pip continues to work for Joe, visiting Miss Havisham every year on his birthday, and constantly regretting his desire for a more comfo
15、rtable lifestyle and his infatuation with Estella.Some time later a stranger visits Pip and informs him that an anonymous benefactor would like to transform him into a gentleman. The stranger, a lawyer named Jaggers, will administer Pips new income and suggests that Pip move to London and take a man
16、 named Matthew Pocket as his tutor, who happens to be a relative of Miss Havisham. Pip assumes that Miss Havisham is his mysterious benefactor. Pip buys himself some new clothes and bidding his family farewell, slips out of town on his own, embarrassed to be seen in his new outfit with Joe.The Secon
17、d Stage of Pips Expectations In London, Pip lodges with Pockets son Herbert. Pip also becomes friends with John Wemmick, Jaggers clerk, and learns that Jaggers is a famous lawyer who is noted for his work in defending prisoners and thieves who face execution. Wemmick takes Pip home to dinner one nig
18、ht, and Pip is intrigued by his house, which resembles a tiny castle, complete with drawbridge and moat, where Wemmick lives with his elderly and stone-deaf father, whom he calls the Aged P. Pip is also invited to dine at Jaggers house, where he meets Jaggers sullen housekeeper, Molly.Joe comes to L
19、ondon to bring a message to Pip, who is embarrassed to have Joe visit him. The message is from Miss Havisham, who invites Pip to come to see Estella, who is visiting her mother. Going to Satis House at once, Pip is surprised to find that Orlick is now Miss Havishams watchman, and he tells Jaggers th
20、at the man should be dismissed. Not long after this, Pip learns that his sister has died, and he returns home for her funeral. While he is there, he promises Biddy that he will visit Joe often in the future, but Biddy expresses her doubt that he actually will do so:I am not going to leave poor Joe a
21、lone.Biddy said never a single word.Biddy, dont you hear me?Yes, Mr. Pip.Not to mention your calling me Mr. Pip which appears to me to be in bad taste, Biddy what do you mean?What do I mean? asked Biddy, timidly.Biddy, said I, in a virtuously self-asserting manner, I must request to know what you me
22、an by this?By this? said Biddy.Now dont echo, I retorted. You used not to echo, Biddy.Used not! said Biddy. O Mr. Pip! Used! Biddy, said I, I made a remark respecting my coming down here often, to see Joe, which you received with a marked silence. Have the goodness, Biddy, to tell me why.Are you qui
23、te sure, then, that you WILL come to see him often? asked Biddy, stopping in the narrow garden walk, and looking at me under the stars with a clear and honest eye.Oh dear me! said I, as if I found myself compelled to give up Biddy in despair. This really is a very bad side of human nature! Dont say
24、any more, if you please, Biddy. This shocks me very much.The Third Stage of Pips Expectations One day Pip is visited by a stranger, and soon recognizes him to be the convict to whom he had brought food years ago. The convict, Abel Magwitch, has made a fortune as a sheep farmer in New South Wales, Au
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