A 6 year old boy named Pip lived in an English wetland with his sister (Mrs. Joe Galli) and his sister Mr. Joe (Mr. Joe Gighi). His older sister is jealous and has as much meaning as most older sisters - but his brother-in-law Joe is the best one about Pip. On Christmas Eve, Pip encountered a prisoner who ran away in the cemetery severely. Pip stealed Mrs. Joe's food so that the prisoner did not starve (and the prisoner made sure not to peel off his own internal organs). Soon afterwards, apparently unrelated, Pip was asked to play an eerie young lady Miss Habbisi who was living on the street.
Charles Dickens's "Greater Propect Charles Dickens" novel has great expectations during the Victorian era and is highly correlated with the poverty encountered when Dickens became famous. It includes his life after his early meeting with a young boy Philip Pirrip (known as 'Pip') and fugitive Abel Magwitch, he is afraid, but he is still kindly kind Is ... Many of the characters of "Great Future" are rich and diverse characters, especially Pip, Joe Gargery, Mrs. Joe. The physical description of the character is an example of the technique used by Charles Dickens. Other techniques include character's speech and customs, character interaction with others, selection of role names and their surroundings.
Charles Dickens's "Great Expectations" and "Great Expectations" appeared in the early Victorian era, established by Charles Dickens in 1860. It is written as the first person's story and Pip as an old man tells the story of his life. I pay attention to how his very strict education affects his future performance. The title "Great Future" shows the change in the fate of Pips throughout the story and there is a blacksmith's deal from a poor family living in this country, living a luxurious life in London.
"Great Future" by Charles Dickens is a growing novel. Growing novels are usually stories of human growth and development in the context of a clear social order. "A wonderful future" is recognized as a growth novel for autobiographical elements. This was incorporated into the text as it was an old Pip who reviewed his life and self-development, given when using the word "I". Growing novels should include the teachings that Charles Dickens presented in textbooks.