How Does Pip Change Throughout The Novel

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Charles Dickens classic, Great Expectations, is filled with many life-lessons and educational insights. Pip originally thinks that the purpose of education is to be satisfied with himself. Pip goes through many changes that help convert himself and his friends to become better people. Pip’s own changes are important to the storyline. Dickens uses the changes that Pip faces and how he goes from being an innocent boy into an arrogant gentleman. Pip learns to forgive and knows what must be done, the right way. There are certain circumstances in the book that calls for Pip to make truthful actions when he decides to take the easy way out and possibly make a choice that will come back to haunt him. He eventually learns towards the end of the book that he should do what is truthfully right for him and his …show more content…

The important lesson that Pip actually learns by the end of the novel is that he has changed based on his own expectations, hence the novel’s name. He grew up, taking in information and using that knowledge in his later life, exploring around London, meeting new friends and experiencing romance, or how much it can hurt. Pip got through his head that the way you treat someone will affect you. For instance, when Magwitch showed up in Pip’s later life, he looked for forgiveness and Pip did just that. His treatment of Magwitch at first isn’t very accepting, but Pip then realizes that the man has risked a lot, possibly including his own life, to see him. Pip dislikes him still, however. Magwitch's telling of his hard life brings more sympathy, and Pip begins to like him and understand what he’s been through. When Magwitch falls ill, Pip becomes more loyal to the man, more than he ever had been before. Pip has become a better man. When he comes across his expectations, Pip finally gives reasons for his shame and is quick to place some distance between himself. He holds back his fondness for Joe, but

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