Pip Is An Ignorant Country Boy

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In a way, our boy, Pip, is quite like dear Elphaba. In Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations, the moral theme is simple: devotion, faithfulness, and conscience are more imperative than social inclination, wealth, and class. Pip is an idealist at heart; whenever he can muse of something that is better than what he already has, his immediate desire is the drive to obtaining that particular improvement. When he sees Satis House, he longs to be a wealthy gentleman; and when thinking of his moral shortcomings, he longs to be good; when he realizes that he cannot read, he longs to learn how. However, as long Pip is an ignorant country boy, his hope of social advancement is deemed quite low on the spectrum of possibility. He understands this fact as

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