Great Expectations Chapter 11 notes

  1. Pip meets some of Miss Havisham’s relatives on his next visit to Satis House. These people are the Pockets. They like to gossip about each other and complain. He also meets another unidentified figure on the stairs. This man seems very authoritative.

  2. The Pockets talk about a relative called Cousin Raymond.

  3. They dislike Raymond because he refused to pay for ‘deep trimmings’ for a funeral until pushed to pay for them. If he hadn’t paid for the ‘deep trimmings’ he would have shamed the family by showing a lack of money and appearances.

  4. Estella treats Pip meanly when he arrives. She continues to be bullyish towards him.

  5. Her attitude changes when he leaves the house. She is more flirty and lets Pip kiss her cheek – very naughty behaviour for a Victorian girl! This is in reaction to witnessing him fight Herbert Pocket.

  6. The centre piece that Pip sees in the house is Miss Havisham’s wedding day feast. Miss Havisham says that she will be laid upon the table when she dies. Everything has stopped since her wedding day and she and the wedding preparations decay as a curse.

  7. As Pip leaves the mansion he meets a boy. The boy challenges him to a fight. He continuously knocks the boy down till the boy concedes that Pip has won. The boy is Herbert Pocket, a son of the Pocket family.

Great Expectations Chapter 9 & 10 notes

  1. Pip didn’t want to tell the truth about what happened at Satis House (playing cards with Estella whilst Miss Havisham watched) because he didn’t think they’d understand Miss Havisham’s weirdness.

  2. Instead he makes up a funny weird story about his visit in which he claims he went in a coach in the house and drank wine and ate fancy food and played with swords.

  3. Mrs Joe and Pumblechook believe Pip’s story because they know Miss Havisham is a bit weird and neither of them have met or seen her.

  4. Joe is angry when Pip tells him the truth because he doesn’t want Pip telling lies. He also explains that he has nothing to be embarrassed about because if he works hard then he can educate himself and achieve things.

  5. Pip’s expectations have changed because he now knows he can control his fate through hard work.

  6. (OWN ANSWER)

  7. Pip is dissatisfied with Mr Wopsle’s school because he realises it is a sham. The teacher sleeps the whole time, the children constantly fight each other, there are no resources in the room that are usuable and the children recite things that they don’t actually understand properly.

  8. Pip and Joe find bank notes in Joe’s pocket when they get back from the pub after Pip’s school. Pip knows the money is from the convict because the stranger in the pub who put the money in Joe’s pocket had secretly shown Pip the stolen file.

Great Expectations Chapter 8 notes

  1. Mr Pumblechook treats Pip strangely before going to Satis House. He keeps making him answer sums. He is testing Pip.

  2. Satis House is like a prison. Despite being a beautiful building at one point, it has been walled up in parts and fitted with iron bars.

  3. Pip concludes that Miss Havisham and the room look the way they do because everything has stopped.

  4. Pip and Estella are not comfortable together. Estella cannot be bothered with Pip and she bullies and belittles him. Pip remains polite throughout but Estella snaps and is cruel.

  5. Pip feels ashamed for appearing working class – his hands, his naming the cards ‘jacks’ and not ‘knaves’.

  6. When Pip leaves he sees a vision of Miss Havisham hanging from a beam.

Great Expectations Chapter 6 & 7 notes

  1. At the beginning of C6 Pip feels bad because he lied to Joe.

  2. Pip doesn’t feel ashamed for stealing Mrs Joe’s food because he doesn’t love her. However, he loves Joe and so the lies make him feel bad.

  3. Mr Pumblechook declares that the convict climbed the outer walls and used his bedsheets to clamber down the chimney and exited out the same way. This suggests Pumblechook is very imaginative and also pompous as he won’t let anyone challenge his idea.

  4. Pip was to be apprenticed which means learning a trade over a period of years.

  5. Pip is educated at an evening school. The teacher constantly falls asleep as the kids learn very little. They pay for this lack of education. The owner recites to them suggesting education was rote learning rather than learning how to think critically for yourself.

  6. We learn that Joe’s childhood was very difficult. His father was a drunk who beat up his mum and him. His mum tried to take him away several times, but his father always found them and brought them back. He hadn’t really gone to school much as it cost money, but he became apprenticed as a blacksmith so he could start earning.

  7. Joe is motivated to stay with Mrs Joe because she reminds him of his mother. Also he sees himself in Pip and wants him to be cared for.

Great Expectations Chapter 5 notes

  1. The suspense of Chapter 4 is resolved as Pip does not receive the blame for stealing the pie. The militia enter and ask for help in making irons to catch the escaped convicts.

  2. The Sergeant is very polite and upright. He says all the right things, although he says more than he has too.

  3. The convict realises that Pip did not tell on him and cannot understand why he kept silent about him.

  4. The two convicts are angry at one another because they were tried and convicted of the same crime. Convict 2 blames Convict 1 for being there, Convict 1 simply wants to harm Convict 2.

  5. Joe says he was happy that the convict got food for his night on the marshes. This shows Joe is a caring person.

  6. The reference to the ship as a ‘wicked Noah’s ark’ is because there are so many convicts packed onto the ship and instead of being taken somewhere nice they are going to do hard labour.

Great Expectations Chapter 3 & 4 notes

  1. Pip meets another convict when he sets out to make his delivery who he thinks is the man employed to eat him.

  2. It is surprising when Convict 1 reacts to the news of Convict 2 as it suggests there never was another man with him and Pip has been scared for no reason.

  3. Mr Wopsle is the clerk for the church and he says that ‘Swine were the companions of the Prodigal (Jesus)’ Mr Wopsle says it to suggest there is something wrong with Pip. Dickens includes it to make a joke about Mr Wopsle eating pork whilst talking about pigs.

  4. It is ironic that Mrs Joe does not attend church as she claims to be a devout Christian. She claims she does not attend so she can get more work done as Joe and Pip aren’t in the house.

  5. Mrs Joe and Joe host Christmas dinner. They invite Mr Wopsle the church clerk, Mr Hubble the wheelwright and his wife, and also Mr Pumblechook who was a grain merchant and Joe’s uncle.

  6. Mr Wopsle and Mr Pumblechook are both prideful and entitled men who have a lot to say without actually saying very much.

  7. At this point in the novel it is suggested that Pip would become a blacksmith apprenticed to Joe.

  8. Suspense is built at the end of Chapter 4 as Pip has stolen a pie to give to the convict which was to be presented as the pudding at Christmas dinner. He is now stressing about how he will not get the blame for his act of thievery.

Great Expectations Chapter 1 & 2 notes

  1. When Great Expectations opens Pip is in the graveyard looking at his Mum and Dad’s gravestone.

  2. Dickens hooks his reader immediately by having Pip attacked by an escaped convict.

  3. Pip is afraid that if he doesn’t return with a file and food for the convict then he will be disembowelled by the convict’s friend.

  4. Mrs Joe calls the stick ‘Tickler’ because she used it to hurt people rather than actually make them laugh. It shows she has a twisted sense of humour.

  5. The story is told from Pip’s point of view. He is reflecting on his own history. This was unusual at the time as the majority of novels were written in the present tense with a third person voice – not in first person, past tense.

  6. Pip is technically Joe’s brother-in-law, as Joe is married to Pip’s big sister. Joe and Mrs Joe are raising Pip, although Joe is more like Pip’s best friend.

  7. There is physical comedy in Pip getting tipped over the gravestone, even though this is threatening behaviour from the convict. It is also physically funny when Pip is chased around the kitchen and Joe acts as his protector from Mrs Joe.

  8. At the end of Chapter 2 Pip runs from the house to give the convict the stolen supplies on a very bleak morning. (dramatic epithet)

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