In the novel Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, he uses Pip as his narrator to describe his ideals, opinions, and thoughts. He conveys the idea that wealth leads to isolation, and also that affection and kindness are more important to a person than social class and wealth. Pip is the perfect character to depict these concepts in the way that Pip is kind as a child but faces changes in himself as money and social class get involved and begin to corrupt him. This causes isolation but he straightens himself out eventually, putting an end to the solitude and coldness that he once carried.
In general and as a child, Pip is kind. The personality of someone as a child shows the quintessence of a person since it is the time before lifetime experiences affect the person's behavior and thoughts. …