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How Does Dickens Create Sympathy In Great Expectations

Decent Essays

This passage is one of the very first sentence to describe Pip. By this passage, Dickens made readers feel sympathy or empathy towards Pip by telling them that he is an orphan. This is very interesting and ironic because this contrast the title of the book. Pip expresses his love for Mr. Joe, a father figure, in this passage, but he also makes readers feel compassion by stating that “perhaps for no better reason… than because the dear fellow let [Pip] love him.” This shows how deserted he is. He expresses that he cannot love someone because they do not let him. This foreshadows that throughout the Pip’s journey, he will find what true love and true friendship is. In this passage, Pip decides not to tell Joe that Pip was the one who stole the pie and had given it to Magwitch. This important passage leads Pip, who is innocent and impeccable, to mature into an adult world. Pip learns how to tell lies to protect what is valuable to himself. He mentions himself as an “untaught genius” who “made the discovery of the line of action” for himself. This shows that the brutal world has forced Pip to give up his own morality to survive.

Charles Dickens conveys how children notice injustice with their innocent eyes, but have no power to change it. This quote is very significant because during 1860's, when this book was published, people …show more content…

However, this passage shows reader that Pip has changed. It also foreshadows a huge life changing event for Pip because the time has "brought to a premature

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