Question
Passage
Poems
Great Expectations, a novel written by Charles Dickens (10-100) nunced by the rigid clans structure of vietanon England in this excerpt a young orphan named Pipt is sent to sta wealthy, eccentric woman named Mus Havisham to entertain her. Unknown to Pis. Mas Havisham at the altar o the day of her wedding many years before she has lived ever since as if teme had stepped at that foturtul hour
Excerpt from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
In an arm-chair, with an elbow resting on the table and her head leaning on that hand, sat the strangest lady I have over soer or shall ever see
She was dressed in rich materials-satins, and lace, and silks-all of writo
How can the reader tell that the Passage Is written from the point of view of a nineteenth-century British child?
There are only brief moments of dialogue in the overall passage compared to the lengthy descriptions
The introduction mentions Victorian England and there are references throughout the passage that Pip is a young boy.
There are numerous details in the passage about Miss Havisham's wealth and Pip's relative poverty.
The introduction mentions that Miss Havisham was left at the altar, and the rest of the passage focuses on the description of her character.
Poems
Great Expectations, a novel written by Charles Dickens (10-100) nunced by the rigid clans structure of vietanon England in this excerpt a young orphan named Pipt is sent to sta wealthy, eccentric woman named Mus Havisham to entertain her. Unknown to Pis. Mas Havisham at the altar o the day of her wedding many years before she has lived ever since as if teme had stepped at that foturtul hour
Excerpt from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
In an arm-chair, with an elbow resting on the table and her head leaning on that hand, sat the strangest lady I have over soer or shall ever see
She was dressed in rich materials-satins, and lace, and silks-all of writo
How can the reader tell that the Passage Is written from the point of view of a nineteenth-century British child?
There are only brief moments of dialogue in the overall passage compared to the lengthy descriptions
The introduction mentions Victorian England and there are references throughout the passage that Pip is a young boy.
There are numerous details in the passage about Miss Havisham's wealth and Pip's relative poverty.
The introduction mentions that Miss Havisham was left at the altar, and the rest of the passage focuses on the description of her character.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The best answer to the question of how the reader can tell that the passage is written from the point of view of a nineteenth-century British child is:
**The introduction mentions Victorian England and there are references throughout the passage that Pip is a young boy.**
This choice clearly establishes the time period and provides insight into the perspective of the narrator, Pip, who is a child in the context of the story.
**The introduction mentions Victorian England and there are references throughout the passage that Pip is a young boy.**
This choice clearly establishes the time period and provides insight into the perspective of the narrator, Pip, who is a child in the context of the story.