Friday, July 19, 2019
Analyse the Opening Chapter of Great Expectations :: Great Expectations Essays
Analyse the opening chapter of Great Expectations    The author Charles Dickens wrote ââ¬ËGreat Expectationsââ¬â¢ as a series of  instalments, which then put together and turned into a novel. It has  been written in first person narrative, which is good because you get  to know pip very well. My expectations of the opening chapter of  ââ¬ËGreat Expectationsââ¬â¢ Where far from what I experienced when we  actually read the book. It was also set in the olden days. By the end  of the story I found it quite entertaining. In the first paragraph we  expect to be introduced to the plot, characters and the setting.    In this first chapter Pip meets the convict up on the graveyard, which  is the highlight of the chapter. The convict scars pip into bringing  him ââ¬Ëwhittlesââ¬â¢ which means necessary like food and drinks. The convict  also gets pip to bring him a file because pip mentions that his  brother in law is a blacksmith. Pip is scared of the convict because  of the language he uses ââ¬Ëkeep still you little devil or ill cut youââ¬â¢re  throat. When a ââ¬Ëfearful man, all in course grey, with an iron on his  leg. A man with no hat, and with broken shoes and with an old rag tied  round his head. A man who had been soaked in water, and smothered in  mud, and lamed by stones, and cut by flints, and stung by nettles, and  torn by briars; who limped, and shivered and he glared and growled;  and whose teeth chattered in his head as he seized me by the chinââ¬â¢  says that to a young child we believe to be about 11 ââ¬â 14 years old  Pip is going to do everything he is asked to do and exactly when he  says it.    The first character to be introduced was Pip. In the first paragraph  he introduces himself and tells us that his fathers name was ââ¬ËPirripââ¬â¢  and his Christian name is ââ¬ËPhilipââ¬â¢ so he mixed the two names together  and came up with ââ¬ËPipââ¬â¢. His mother and father died before he can  remember them and there was no such thing as photos in those days so  they do not know what they look like or what they are like to talk to  and get on with. Pip got introduced first because he is the main  character. The other character we meet in this chapter is the convict.  The author gives the convict an animal imagery when he 'ate the bread  ravenously'. Pips character is polite and he speaks to the convict who  is threatening his life using words like 'kindly please to let me keep    					    
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