Monday, December 17, 2018
'Pip wants to be a gentleman Essay\r'
'ââ¬ËIt was evident that he had nonhing around him but the simplest necessaries, for e rattlingthing that I remarked upon turned bulge out to consider been sent in on my account from the c onwardee-house or nighwhere else. ââ¬Ë An an another(prenominal)(prenominal) character who displays this quality is Magwitch: yet though he is a convict, he is a commodity man. ââ¬ËI believe too that he dragged 1 of his legs as if there were still a weight of iron on it, and that from head to break up there was Convict in the very instill of the manââ¬Â¦ but Magwitch ââ¬Â¦ is still a legal manââ¬â¢. This is a direct contrast with Mrs Joe for whom fifty-fifty her funeral was sham and pompous.\r\nââ¬ËI was much annoyed by the abject Pumblechook, who, being bathroom me, persisted all the authority as a delicate attention in arranging my streaming hatband, and smoothing my cloak. ââ¬Ë Newman describes how a true homoââ¬â¢s concern is to make 2 ââ¬Ëevery nonp areil at their ease and at homeââ¬â¢, and Herbertââ¬â¢s carriage is an example of this. When he knock againsts Joe as he visits billet in London, Joe is feeling uncomfortable and out of nates and Herbert tries to correct that by asking polite, easy to transform questions, and, when it was still awkward, he left, to allow scald and Joe to disgorge alone.\r\nHe too comforts dash when he inaugural comes to London by giving him some fruit, which he remembers he pass on be utilize to because he is from the country. Wemmick introduces this trait too. He ensures that his fuss is unendingly kept ââ¬Ëclean, cheerful, comfortable and well cared forââ¬â¢. He also has his house with a moat surrounding it because it makes his father feel secure when he leaves him for acidify. However, at work Wemmick acts very differently, he leaves his gentlemanly side behind and puts his business-like, ââ¬Ëpostboxââ¬â¢ mouth on, as he remarked ââ¬ËWalworth is one present , and the office is anotherââ¬â¢.\r\nAt one point when position is asking his advice Wemmick even says that if Pip had asked him the uniform question at home he would bring forth answered on the whole differently. Whereas Jaggers is always the same official, business-like person at home and at work, he is always the attorney and is very intimidating. True gentlemen will only see and bring out the wide in other people, Joe sees the right-hand(a); for example when he tells Pip well-nigh his father. Although Joeââ¬â¢s father often got drunk and thump out Joeââ¬â¢s mother and Joe himself, Joe didnââ¬â¢t complain or try to make Pip feel disturbing for him, he conscionable said ââ¬Å"he were that upright in his hartââ¬Â.\r\nJaggers does not bring out the good in others. When Pip went for tea at Jaggersââ¬â¢s house, the worst was brought out in him, and his companions, which direct them to a sizeable argument: ââ¬ËDrummle, without any scourge or warning, pulled his hands out of his pockets, fall behindped his round shoulders, swore, took up a large glass, and would defecate flung it at his oppositionââ¬â¢s headââ¬Â¦ ââ¬Ë. Although Pip doesnââ¬â¢t exhibit many of the other traits of a gentleman, he is conscious end-to-end the narrative.\r\nWhen Pip literalizes that he loves Estella he eject still admit to himself that she makes him miserable because she torments him and says to himself, ââ¬ËPip, what a sucker you are! ââ¬Ë Estella is also self-aware, she understands that Miss Havisham has do her into a heartless monster, and she explains this to Pip. ââ¬ËYou had not your little wits shift by their intriguing against you, suppressed and defenselessââ¬Â¦ role player of a womanââ¬â¢. Dickensââ¬â¢ true gentlemen wait on people out and are modest about the favours they have done. As Newman says of a true gentleman2 ââ¬ËHe makes light favours while he does them, and seems to be receiving when he is conferring.\r\nââ¬Ë Pip illustrates this trait well. He arranges a place for business for Herbert. This is Pipââ¬â¢s first real act of generosity, though itââ¬â¢s ironic because it is made with the money from his own benefactor. However, whenever Pumblechook does favours, he does them because he hopes for something in return. When he arranged for Pip to play at Miss Havishamââ¬â¢s, he is trying to ingratiate himself with Mrs Joe, and Pip, so when Pip gets money from Miss Havisham, Pip will feel obliged to give him a dispense â⬠as without Pumblechook it would never have happened.\r\nWhen Pip first moves to London to be a gentleman, everyone in his colonization thinks that Pumblechook is Pipââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëpatron, companion and friendââ¬â¢. This, of course, is not true; as Pip would have sort of Pumblechook had never tried to get him a line of descent at Miss Havishamââ¬â¢s. Being sensitive must(prenominal) be an important factor of being a good person. Biddy displays this characteristic, as she relises how Pip has support Joe. However, she also tells us that Joe never complained of Pip, hurting him. Estella is very insensitive, although this isnââ¬â¢t entirely her own fault.\r\nShe says of Pip at the beginning of the novel, ââ¬Ëcoarse hands and thick bootsââ¬â¢, which in truth offended, and affected Pip for the rest of his life. Although, she has got a jaunt of humanity in her as she keeps warning Pip not to fall in love with her. comparable the star she is named after she always keeps cold and far from Pip. Dickensââ¬â¢ gives Orlick as an example of a completely evil character. Orlick murdered Mrs Joe, and tried to murder Pip. He killed Mrs Joe when Pip was old enough to ââ¬Ëkill offââ¬â¢ his parents and gain his independence. Dickens doesnââ¬â¢t want us to understand Orlick, or feel a drop of sympathy for him.\r\nHe is Pipââ¬â¢s alter ego, he does the things Pip would never dare do, or unconsciously thought. Dickens is showing us that if you have money, this does not necessarily make you a gentleman. Drummle is an unequivocal example that money and class alone do not make a gentleman. On the other hand, Joe and Herbert, who are poor, are the main examples of true gentlemen in the schoolbook; they show the true qualities that compose a good person. Pip is a developing character, and therefrom changes from a small innocent little boy, into a snob, and then a much more mature, wiser and sadder Pip develops at the end of the narrative.\r\nI feel that Pip is a gentleman though at the end, throughout he is self aware, and he has done favours to Herbert. With Magwitch there for Pip to care for and love, he managed to mature and turn over out of the sham and elitist younger Pip. I think that all these qualities that make up a good person are definitely still applicable today. Just as the factors that constitute a good person are the same for the poor, as for the mystifying in Dic kensââ¬â¢s time, they are just as important to people now as they were then.\r\nIf Joe or Herbert came into this century we would admire the gentlemanly characteristics in them, just as Pip saw the good in them in the nineteenth century. Bibliography 1. Newman, Newman on the piece (1852) 2. Mahoney. J, Great Expectations for GCSE, Ashford Colour Press, Hampshire (1994). ?? ?? ?? ?? 1 Sarah Burton 10S 2nd January 2004 head preview only The above preview is unformatted text This student written piece of work is one of many that can be found in our GCSE Great Expectations section.\r\n'
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