Joe Gargery might be the most universally
liked character in Charles Dicken’s Great Expectations. Born into a family with an abusive father, who cared
more for the bottle than he did his own family, Joe was taught in the ways of blacksmithing. A formal education, with the
ability to read and write, was never afforded to this man of large physical stature, where muscle and brawn were much more
important tools than learning.
Where Joe Gargery lacked a gentlemen’s
education, he more than made up for it with his kind and gentle ways. Early on in Dicken’s tale we hear of Joe’s
caring ways when he marries a woman who has also taken on the parental duties for her younger brother, Pip. Joe treats his
wife and young guardian as well as anyone could have hoped for. He many times shielded young Pip from the abuse of Mrs. Joe
and took that same abuse upon himself without complaint. Joe looked forward to the day that he could pass on his blacksmithing
skills to his young Pip, as a father would his only son. But, when Pip longed for something more out of life than to follow
in the blacksmith’s footsteps, Joe did nothing that would have held Pip back from his great expectations. Even after
Pip became ashamed of Joe, with his lack of education and his lower social class, Joe never turned his back on the boy he
had taken in as his own.
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Joe eventually remarried a young girl by the name
of Biddy Wopsle after his first wife, Pip’s sister, Mrs. Joe, died. Even though Biddy and Joe had a son of their own
and they found happiness that he never had with his first wife, Joe never diminished the love and admiration that he had for
his young friend Pip.
Joe Gargery, not in social etiquette or social class,
but in character demonstrated what a true gentleman was.
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