“A boy who excited loathing in every respectable mind” (Dickens 304), Trabb’s Boy is a lively, trouble seeking, and brutally honest character in Charles Dickens’s, Great Expectations. Even though he appears only a handful of times in the novel his character plays a significant role. As Pip’s enemy, Trabb’s Boy helps the reader see Pip’s faults. Trabb’s Boy’s most important role is that of Pip’s rescuer.
Trabb’s Boy has very few speaking parts, but an understanding of his personality is seen through his numerous actions. His personality is frank, vivacious, and mischievous. In the way Mr. Trabb speaks to Trabb’s Boy in Chapter Nineteen, there is evidence that Trabb’s Boy has caused trouble for him in the past. He calls Trabb’s Boy a “young scoundrel” (186) and tells him not to pull any tricks (186).
He is always looking for ways to cause “variety and excitement at anybody’s expense” (534).
Even though Trabb’s Boy is named after the tailor, and has no real name; he is very independent. He is his own best friend, and only does things that interest or benefit him. “He was a boy whom no man could hurt; an invulnerable and dodging serpent who, when chased into a corner, flew out again between his captor’s legs, scornfully yelping” (303).
Trabb’s Boy is not an evil person; he is just an innocent nuisance who wants excitement and to have fun.
The Term Paper on Miss Havisham Pip Joe Chapter
... neighbors. This pleasant walk is disturbed by the Trabb boy who makes fun of Pip, imitating the snobbish way he walks and barking ... general whopping. They end the fight and the boy, cheerful as ever, wishes Pip a good afternoon. At the gate, Estella tells ... the two play cards, despite Estella's objection that Pip was just a 'common labouring-boy.' 'Well,' says Miss Havisham, 'you can break ...
Another aspect of Trabb’s Boy is that he is a shrewd observer and is not bashful to express his opinion. As the “most audacious boy in all that countryside” (186), Trabb’s Boy is not bashful of showing his contempt for Pip. He openly expresses his opinions because he doesn’t care what others think of his behavior. Even when Trabb’s Boy first meets Pip, he causes a commotion to “express equality with any blacksmith, alive or dead” (186).
He believes that he is just as good as Pip, no matter how many new suits Pip buys. In Chapter Thirty, Trabb’s Boy follows Pip through the town, mocking him. He yells, “Don’t know yah” (303), to passersby to poke fun at Pip’s arrogant attitude. Since Pip is the sole narrator of the novel, Trabb’s Boy is a needed necessity so the reader has a realistic view of Pip’s character.
Trabb’s Boy’s most significant contribution to the novel is in Chapter Fifty-Three, when he rescues Pip from Orlick. Trabb’s Boy did not intend to save Pip’s life; he was just acting on his natural curiosity. Without Trabb’s Boy’s “ancient habit of happening to be everywhere where he had no business” (533), Pip had been murdered. Thus, since Pip is the narrator of the novel, it is reasonable to say that without Trabb’s Boy there would have been no story of Pip’s “great expectations”. Pip finally tells Trabb’s Boy that he is “sorry ever to have had an ill opinion of him” (534), but Trabb’s Boy remains indifferent because he has never worried about Pip’s opinion.
Although Trabb’s Boy had a minor part in the novel, in terms of pages, he played a major role in the outcome of the novel. His bold and amusing antics add comedy to the novel. They also give a more rounded and honest view of Pip. Without Trabb’s Boy there would have been no Great Expectations, and that is a good thing because Great Expectations without Trabb’s Boy wouldn’t have been that great.
Works Cited
Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations. New York: Pocket Books, 2004.