Great Expectations, Charles Dickens (5)
I had forgotten the meaning of the interesting Victorian
phrase: ‘having great expectations’. We first hear the phrase when the young forge-apprentice
protagonist, Pip, finds he has a secret benefactor who intends for him to
become a gentleman with an inheritance – he now has ‘great expectations’. Young
Pip believes this benefactor is the mysterious Miss Havisham, the strange lady
who asked him to visit for amusement for her and her adopted daughter, Estella.
We learn bits and pieces about the tragic past that leads to her isolation and
strange behaviors. While much of the book focuses on the relationships Pip has,
foremost with these two ladies, the secondary characters add color and become
more prominent in the last 1/3 of the book. Here is where the story gets very
compelling, as we learn more about Pip’s benefactor and the interconnecting
lives or the characters. This great novel has many of the classic trademarks of
Dickens: quirky characters, social inequities, humor amid tragedy, and standard
Victorian trappings. I particularly loved Wemmick with his post office mouth
and strange twin behavior (at work versus at home). Some readers may not have
the patience to get through the Victorian language, but I encourage them to try
as the gems of language are worth it. One of my favorites: instead of saying the
rooms were stifling, Dickens writes ‘we found the air was carefully excluded
from both rooms as if air were fatal to life.” Excellent.
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