DWAB Son

620 Words2 Pages

Charles Dickens's Great Expectations, which takes place in Regency England, is a novel about Pip, a young fellow who aspires to both become a gentlemen and win the love of beautiful but heartless Estella, but ultimately ends up in the same position as he was in the beginning of the story: poor and alone. Irony is prevalent in Great Expectations, and Dickens effectively uses it to create both conflict and humor in his novel. While the irony of the identity of Pip's benefactor is central to Great Expectations, the device can also be found in minor parts of the novel, such as Pip's expectations of his friend Herbert to be a failure, Miss Havisham's expectations of Estella to love her, and when Trabb's boy saves Pip's life.

When Pip first receives news of his “great expectations,” he is told that the identity of his benefactor is to be kept a secret; however, both the reader of the novel and Pip strongly suspect Pip's patron to be Miss Havisham, ultimately because she is an heiress to a large fortune and she has had Pip over to her home, Satis House, to play with Estella quite a few tim...

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