Great Expection chapter analysis

Operations Management: Process Designing
September 28, 2020
Training Needs Assessment, Part 2
September 28, 2020

Great Expection chapter analysis

Great Expection chapter analysis

Read the following selections from Great Expectations carefully and critically. Write an analysis of each focusing on the effect created by Dickens’ use of detail.

1.“At last I came within sight of the house, and saw that Trabb and Co. had put in a funereal execution, and taken possession. Two dismally absurd persons, each

ostentatiously exhibiting a crutch done up in a black bandage – as if that instrument could possibly communicate any comfort to anybody – were posted at the front

door; and in one of them I recognized a postboy discharged from the Boar for turning a young couple into a sawpit on their bridal morning, in consequence of

intoxication rendering it necessary for him to ride his horse clasped round the neck with both arms. All the children of the village, and most of the women, were

admiring these sable warders and the closed windows of the house and forge; and as I came up, one of the two warders (the postboy) knocked at the door – implying that

I was far too much exhausted by grief, to have strength remaining to knock for myself.
?Another sable warder (a carpenter, who had once eaten two geese for a wager) opened the door, and showed me into the best parlour.”

2. “Of the conduct of the worldly-minded Pumblechook while this was doing, I desire to say no more than that it was all addressed to me; and that even when those noble

passages were read which remind humanity how it brought nothing into the world and can take nothing out, and how it fleeth like a shadow and never continueth long in

one stay, I heard him cough a reservation of the case of a young gentleman who came unexpectedly into large property. When we got back, he had the hardihood to tell me

that he wished my sister could have known I had done her so much honour, and to hint that she would have considered it reasonably purchased at the price of her death.

After that, he drank all the rest of the sherry, and Mr. Hubble drank the port, and the two talked (which I have since observed to be customary in such cases) as if

they were of quite another race from the deceased, and were notoriously immortal. Finally, he went away with Mr. and Mrs. Hubble – to make an evening of it, I felt

sure, and to tell the Jolly Bargemen that he was the founder of my fortunes and my earliest benefactor.”