Summary
Great Expectations is one of the most celebrated novels by the great 19th-century English author and champion of social reform, Charles Dickens. Published in 1861, the novel is a bildungsroman, following the coming of age of an ambitious orphan nicknamed Pip, with elements of crime fiction and Gothic melodrama. Along with its vivid imagery—from squalor and poverty to prison ships and chains to fights to the death—Great Expectations is known for its colorful cast of characters who have entered popular culture. These include the eccentric, reclusive Miss Havisham, the beautiful but cold Estella, and the humble, kind blacksmith, Joe Gargery. Though firmly set in Victorian England, Great Expectation explores timeless themes such as the toll of poverty and the power of wealth, the desire for love and the pain of rejection, and moral quandaries that blur the lines between good and evil.
Plot
Great Expectations opens on Christmas Eve 1812 with seven-year-old Pip. The scene is a graveyard. An orphan, Pip lives with his hot-tempered sister and her kindhearted, hardworking blacksmith husband, Joe Gargery. While visiting the graves of his parents, Pip encounters an escaped convict who threatens to kill the young boy unless he brings back food and tools. This sets in motion a series of events that changes the trajectory of Pip’s life.
Several years later, Pip is taken under the wing of Miss Havisham, a wealthy, eccentric, and reclusive spinster who lives in a dilapidated house and, still traumatized by being jilted at the altar decades past, wears her tattered old wedding dress. Miss Havisham arranges to have Pip educated and groomed as a gentleman to be a companion for her adopted daughter, Estella. Pip adores Estella, who, sadly, disdains and rejects him. Pip's life takes a fortunate turn when he receives a substantial sum of money from an anonymous benefactor, allowing him to pursue his "great expectations" of becoming a gentleman and winning Estella's heart.
As Pip moves to London and immerses himself in the life of a gentleman, he gradually realizes that his benefactor is not who he expected. His mysterious patron turns out to be the convict he aided years ago, Abel Magwitch, who made his fortune in Australia and secretly arranged for Pip's education and upbringing. Pip is torn between his newfound gentility and his loyalty to Magwitch, a criminal in the eyes of society. The novel explores Pip's moral growth as he navigates the complexities of wealth, social class, and the true meaning of being a gentleman.