Pip
As a bildungsroman, Great Expectations presents the
growth and development of a single character, Philip Pirrip, better known to
himself and to the world as Pip. As the focus of the bildungsroman, Pip is by
far the most important character in Great Expectations: he is both the
protagonist, whose actions make up the main plot of the novel, and the
narrator, whose thoughts and attitudes shape the reader’s perception of the
story. As a result, developing an understanding of Pip’s character is perhaps
the most important step in understanding Great Expectations. ecause Pip is narrating his story many years
after the events of the novel take place, there are really two Pips in Great
Expectations: Pip the narrator and Pip the character—the voice telling the
story and the person acting it out. Dickens takes great care to distinguish the
two Pips, imbuing the voice of Pip the narrator with perspective and maturity
while also imparting how Pip the character feels about what is happening to him
as it actually happens. This skillfully executed distinction is perhaps best
observed early in the book, when Pip the character is a child; here, Pip the
narrator gently pokes fun at his younger self, but also enables us to see and
feel the story through his eyes.
As a character, Pip’s two most important traits are his
immature, romantic idealism and his innately good conscience. On the one hand,
Pip has a deep desire to improve himself and attain any possible advancement,
whether educational, moral, or social. His longing to marry Estella and join
the upper classes stems from the same idealistic desire as his longing to learn
to read and his fear of being punished for bad behavior: once he understands
ideas like poverty, ignorance, and immorality, Pip does not want to be poor,
ignorant, or immoral. Pip the narrator judges his own past actions extremely
harshly, rarely giving himself credit for good deeds but angrily castigating
himself for bad ones. As a character, however, Pip’s idealism often leads him
to perceive the world rather narrowly, and his tendency to oversimplify
situations based on superficial values leads him to behave badly toward the
people who care about him. When Pip becomes a gentleman, for example, he immediately
begins to act as he thinks a gentleman is supposed to act, which leads him to
treat Joe and Biddy snobbishly and coldly.
On the other hand, Pip is at heart a very generous and
sympathetic young man, a fact that can be witnessed in his numerous acts of
kindness throughout the book (helping Magwitch, secretly buying Herbert’s way
into business, etc.) and his essential love for all those who love him. Pip’s
main line of development in the novel may be seen as the process of learning to
place his innate sense of kindness and conscience above his immature idealism.
Not long after meeting Miss Havisham and Estella, Pip’s
desire for advancement largely overshadows his basic goodness. After receiving
his mysterious fortune, his idealistic wishes seem to have been justified, and
he gives himself over to a gentlemanly life of idleness. But the discovery that
the wretched Magwitch, not the wealthy Miss Havisham, is his secret benefactor
shatters Pip’s oversimplified sense of his world’s hierarchy. The fact that he comes
to admire Magwitch while losing Estella to the brutish nobleman Drummle
ultimately forces him to realize that one’s social position is not the most
important quality one possesses, and that his behavior as a gentleman has
caused him to hurt the people who care about him most. Once he has learned
these lessons, Pip matures into the man who narrates the novel, completing
the bildungsroman.
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