Great expectations is one of Dickens' most mature works, and it is his later works. From the perspective of Pip, the protagonist orphan, the story narrates his three life stages from the age of seven in an autobiographical way. Through the ups and downs of the orphan's growth experience, it shows the cruelty of social reality and the author's deep sympathy for the lower class. This process constantly reflects the confusion and lessons in the growth of human nature, which embodies the author's values of self-restraint and rationality and his outlook on life with profound religious complex.
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