Charles Dickens' novel 'Great Expectations' highlights that young, socially unfamiliar orphans named Pip can not adapt to their lives and human relationships around their lives. His story is spoken through the eyes of the old Pip and emphasizes the social aspect denied by Dickens. His skill in the whole novel helps to better understand the life of Pip. When Pip first encountered a criminal who escaped from the grave, the tension between them was clear to the reader, but all of them were revealed in chapter 39, where the reader again met Pips and prisoners, I have witnessed the roles between them are reversed.
Charles Dickens said Pip was a poor and irregular orphan, wearing restrained clothes and some people were disarmed and easily chosen. In chapter 39, Pip is a different character. Pip is a young and wealthy gentleman. My argument proved "I saw the clock on the table." This proves that Pip is a gentleman. Because now he can afford to buy a watch and can read it. Pip does not recognize this stranger. To support this, it says "a very strange face for me". This is obvious as it shows that Pip no longer knows this stranger as it is the face he has forgotten. Pip is kind of shivering. "Starting a little from him" supports my view.
Dickens hired Pip as a narrator to show his positive and predictive relationship with the fugitive. As a reader, this seems to be a strange concept originally based entirely on the dynamics of power between the Pip and the prisoner and his demands he travels back and forth as he is afraid of his life. But when they parted, Pip looked back and saw that the man entered the swamp alone. Pip held his parents in the cold and died in the gravestone alone in the tombstone. . As a reader it seems their relationship seems to be warm at that moment, the two share a common solitude and social alienation - an orphan and a fallen criminal
In "Great Future", I will introduce the hero's Pip. This is because this story is conveyed by the first person. In the middle of this chapter, I took a half introduction to a criminal. I think Dickens expressed his innocence through his speech and dialogue and I think he made the child (Pip) trustworthy; add the word "also" to the above name. Another good example of making Pip more reliable is that he explains the appearance of the criminal.