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Reflections on Great Expectations
Reflections on Great Expectations

After reading a famous book carefully, I believe everyone must understand a lot. Let's write a good review and record your gains and feelings. So how to write a post-reading feeling is more infectious? The following are my thoughts on Great Expectations for your reference only, hoping to help you.

After reading Great Expectations 1 Everyone has heard of the British writer Dickens! He is a famous great writer! I admire him very much, so I have read several of his books. Not long ago, I bought another copy of Great Expectations. After reading it, I was very moved.

Great Expectations mainly tells that the orphan Pip was raised by his sister and brother-in-law and lived a poor but warm life. In order to win the love of beautiful and arrogant rich girl Estena, he decided to be a rich gentleman. Coincidentally, one of the fugitives he once helped made a fortune and secretly sponsored him to study in London and enter the upper class.

Pip seems to have opened a broad road in front of himself, and his "great future" is waiting for him ahead. So he began to despise his birth and his relatives who had difficulties in life. After his courtship to Estner was rejected, the fugitive who funded him was arrested and all his property was confiscated. Pip was abandoned by the upper class again. He learned from the painful experience, re-examined his life and finally realized what real life is. After many years, self-reliant Pip returned to his hometown and got hard-won affection and love.

The whole novel is true and profound, full of ups and downs, full of appeal, especially the part where "Bright Future" disappears in the blink of an eye, and the image of Pip, a middle-aged man who has experienced human changes since then, which makes me unforgettable. It also made me realize a life truth: when we succeed in life, we must not be proud. Maybe one day, like Pip, you will disappear with a bright future. And from Pip, I also saw what kind of life and what kind of future is the real "great future". Our life is the same, you must remember!

Great expectations is a good book, go and read it!

Reflections on Great Expectations 2 Recently, I have been reading another famous foreign book Great Expectations. Although I just started reading it, this book has left a deep impression on me.

Great Expectations translated into Tears of a Lone Star is an educational novel written by British writer Dickens in his later years. Pip, the hero of Orphan, tells three life stages from the age of seven in an autobiographical way. This novel carries out Dickens' style of "talking" and expresses his views on life and human nature through the ups and downs of the orphan Pip in the book.

I have also read Oliver Twist written by Dickens. After careful comparison, I find that these two novels have a lot in common-they both describe the tragic experiences of "little creatures" living at the bottom of British society and profoundly reflect the complex social reality of Britain at that time. It can be seen that Dickens has indeed made outstanding contributions to the development and progress of English critical realism literature, and his works are still popular and have had a far-reaching impact on the development of English literature.

The story begins on Christmas Eve in 18 12. Pip, a little orphan whose parents died, was brought up by a strict and fierce sister. He and his honest blacksmith brother-in-law Joe are often beaten by their sisters. One day, Pip met an escaped prisoner in front of his parents' grave. The escaped prisoner threatened him to ask Pip to get him something to eat and a document. Pip, who was kind and afraid, did so, but soon the fugitive was arrested again by the police in the process of fighting another fugitive.

Although the story seems to have just begun, between the lines has revealed the darkness of society, class inequality, Pip's tragic experience and fear. Pip's sister is overbearing and unreasonable, but she is arrogant in front of outsiders. Everyone in the village is have it both ways and looks down on Pip. Fugitives bully others ... only Joe and Pip are kind-hearted, caring and considerate. But when you think about it, everyone is poor. Who is not forced by the world and life?

Great Expectations still has many storylines and social backgrounds waiting for me to explore. I will continue reading and get more inspiration from them!

After reading 3 Dickens's characters have different expressions, distinct hatred, vivid and touching, and they are ready to come out.

In Great Expectations, the specific characteristics of the characters are: 1, and the certainty of the characters' nature. Miss Havisham outlined in the novel should be a typical bad woman. She was spoiled since she was a child. After being cheated by the groom on her wedding day, she never left home. From then on, "revenge on men all over the world" seemed to be her whole life, and she became an out-and-out old monster. 2. The clarity of the characters. In Dickens' novels, each character represents a certain kind of people and reflects the commonness of a certain kind of people.

For example, the image of Jaggers fully reflected the image of lawyers in London society at that time; 3. Deep humanistic connotation. Dickens is very good at excavating the hidden human factors in characters, and reflects some universal tendencies and laws in human nature through these factors. Sister-in-law Joe became gentle after being paralyzed in bed by gangsters. Before she died, she hugged Joe tightly and asked his forgiveness. Miss Havisham's portrayal is even more incisive:

"She never looked me in the eye just now, and now she turned to see me for the first time; To my great surprise, she knelt in front of me and raised her closed hands to me, which shocked me. ... I was shaking all over when I saw this white-haired and gaunt old man kneeling at my feet.

I asked her to stand up and put out my arm to help her; But she just grabbed one of my hands that she could touch, put her head on my wrist and began to cry sadly. I have never seen her cry; At the moment, I silently leaned over her, thinking that it might be good for her to cry and cry away the pain she had hidden in her heart. She is not kneeling on the ground at the moment, but sitting on the ground. "Oh!" She cried in despair, "I have done such a thing! How could I do such a thing! "

This description reveals human nature and brings great shock to readers.