Rating: Not rated
Tags: Classic Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
In an overgrown churchyard, a grizzled convict springs
upon an orphan named Pip. The convict terrifies the young boy
and threatens to kill him unless Pip helps further his
escape. Later, Pip finds himself in the ruined garden where
he meets the bitter and crazy Miss Havisham and her foster
child Estella, with whom he immediately falls in love. After
a secret benefactor gives him a fortune, Pip moves to London,
where he cultivates great expectations for a life which would
allow him to discard his impoverished beginnings and
socialize with the idle upper class. As Pip struggles to
become a gentleman and is tormented endlessly by the
beautiful Estella, he slowly learns the truth about himself
and his illusions. Written in the last decade of his life,
Great Expectations reveals Dickens's dark attitudes
toward Victorian society, its inherent class structure, and
its materialism. Yet this novel persists as one of
Dickens’s most popular. Richly comic and immensely
readable,
Great Expectations overspills with vividly drawn
characters, moral maelstroms, and the sorrow and pity of
love.
Great Expectations
, described by G. K.
Chesterton as a "study in human weakness and the slow
human surrender," may be called Charles Dickens'
s finest
moment in a remarkably illustrious literary career.