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cream, she is also part of his dream, his illusion that she intends him
to marry Estella.
The next dream in this novel has to do with this illusion as well, it
occurs once again towards the end of the chapter and the end of the
instalment and it sets the tone in which the reader ends this part of
Pip's expectations, when they really begin to bloom. He has had his
fortune announced to him and prepares to go to London to enter upon a
new life there. He wants to rise in the world and to climb socially.
His childhood full of hostility and guilt is now over, he wants to
leave the nightmarish atmosphere behind him without realizing that he
will only enter into the daydream, the wishful thinking of the convict
Magwitch. The last night he spends in his childhood home is described
at the end of Chapter 19
"All night there were coaches in my broken sleep, going to wrong
places instead of to Londcr and having in the traces, now dogs,
now cats, now pigs, now me. - never horses. Fantastic failures
of journeys occupied me until the day dawned and the birds were
singing. Then, I got up and partly dressed, and sat at the window
to take a last look out, in taking it fell asleep."
This dream is not only put towards the end of the chapter but also
owards the end of "...THE FIRST STAGE OF PIP'S EXPECTATIONS."
Once more it has the function of giving the reader a glimpse of Pip's
inner life, the state of mind he is in at that moment and once again
a point of reflection for the reader.
In the dreams Pip is shown with the weaknesses and shortcomings an
immature human being can have. This dream also gives insight into the
character Pip develops into in the second stage of his expectations.
Pip turns into a nasty little snob who feels way above the people he
used to be familiar with, Joe, his poor sister and Biddy who has taken
up her place in the household. Pip plans to go to London in order to
become a man of the world. It is natural that he should be full of
dreams then, both at night and in the daytime. But in the daytime he
refuses Joe's company when Joe offers to walk him to the coach in the
morning, he wishes to walk away all alone, and at night he is therefore
visited by his guilty conscience and knows very well that his attitude
is slightly ridiculous.
Once more it is a visual dream - contrary to a few examples where only