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More final questions for Bleak House
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There is the omnipotent narrator and then there is Esther's account. I found Est6her's much more interesting and looked forward to her story, parly because Dickens is long-winded in his story-telling!

I didn't mind John Jarndyce arranging Esther's marriage. It was clear from the narrative that she wanted to marry him and that the only thing standing in the way was her earlier promise to Mr. Jarndyce. She was so determined to stand by that promise that he had to trick her to get her to marry the man she really wanted.
2. Esther tells her story from her narrow point of view and we get the other important details from the omnipotent narrator.
2. How do the two narrators work together to tell the story of Bleak House?