Miss Havisham Meaning

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Summary of Great Expectations Chapter 8-11
In Chapter eight, Estella introduced the Satis House which had a meaning that whoever owned the house could want nothing more in life. The clocks on wall in Miss Havisham’s room all stopped exactly at twenty to nine. Miss Havisham, a weird and freaky looking lady dressed in the wedding gown, commanded Estella to insult Pip. Strong imagery was used to describe the mansion and Miss Havisham to build a tense and suspenseful atmosphere. Furthermore, the meaning of the Satis House may be a satire. Miss Havisham owned the house but she was not happy at all, which could be told by her dressing style and behaviors. She was a hard-hearted woman who proudly wore her emotional wounds like a badge of honor. Her command of asking Estella to insult Pip probably reflects that her interest was to exact revenge on men. …show more content…

Joe and Mr Pumblechook. Pip felt guilty and confessed to Joe that he was embarrassed about being a “commoner” because of his attraction to Estella, and Joe warned him by saying “if you can’t get to be oncommon through going straight, you’ll never get to do it through crooked.” There are two possibilities why Pip lied. Firstly, it may be Pip’s way to vent his anger. He was greatly insulted and fooled in the house but Mrs. Joe still kept questioning him closely about the details, so telling lies became the way that was seemingly glorifying but actually satirizing the upper-class families. Secondly, it was an expression of Pip’s ambition and snobbery. Pip was attracted to Estella but he was humiliated because of he was a “commoner”. Pip was eager to get rid of the “commoner community”, so he used lies to satisfy his inner aspiration and vanity, and also to build a social ladder for him to reach his dream

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