Tuesday, September 17, 2019
How important are the chapters one to three in Great Expectations? Essa
How important are the chapters one too three in Great Expectations?  What does the reader learn about the social and historical, from these  chapters?    The setting from the start of the book is very important, from the  unwelcoming and stereotypical graveyard that give the book a starting  tense and exiting mood, and the humble blacksmiths that acts as a  platform for Pip's expectations and the opposite setting to much of  the grander scenery in London. The graveyard at the start of the book  is typical example of how the setting contributes so well to the story  and the atmosphere; this is just one of the more obvious examples.  Starting the book in a graveyard quickly informs the reader of a lot  of information about Pips history that under different circumstances  would have taken a lot longer to explain; things like Pips parents and  family were quickly and briefly explained to the readers via the  gravestones and Magwitches asking "Where's your mother?" and Pip's  response being "There sir" as he points to his Mother, Father and five  sibling's gravestones.    The graveyard is...                      
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