Great Expectations Parts 2 and 3
About this set
Created by:
13DaphneM on June 1, 2009
Subjects:
Great Expectations, Charles Dickens, english
Classes:
Literary Analysis II, Harker Middle 8th English
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50 terms
Terms | Definitions |
|---|---|
Herbert's nickname for Pip: | Handel |
Miss Havisham's husband to be was: | Trying to steal her money |
Pip goes to Wemmick's house and sees: | Unique shape and structure (very palace-like), the Aged Parent, a drawbridge, and well-kept gardens |
Drummle and Mrs. Pocket are both: | Snobs |
Words to describe Wemmick: | Eccentric, discreet, businesslike, and kind |
Molly's relationship with Jaggers is: | One where Jaggers has a strange influence over her |
Molly's most disturbing feature: | Scarred wrist |
Pip's reactions to Joe coming to London: | Consternation, anxiety, fear, and embarassment |
When he visits, Joe tells Pip he has spoken to: | Miss Havisham |
Pip stays at the Blue Boar Inn instead of Joe's when he returns to his hometown and lies to himself about why he is doing so...the truth is: | He thinks he is Joe's superior |
Miss Havisham's advice to Pip about Estella: | To love her completely |
Before meeting Estella to escort her, Pip goes to: | Newgate Prison |
Pip goes to Newgate with this person: | Wemmick |
Things that happen to Pip when he comes of age: | He's given a large sum of money, helps Herbert, asks to learn who his benefactor is, and learns he will earn 500 pounds per year |
When Wemmick advises Pip not to help Herbert, we see Wemmick's: | Double-sided personality |
Pip is surprised when he escorts Estella to Satis because: | He saw Miss Havisham and Estella argue |
Estella points out to Miss Havisham the irony that: | Miss Havisham is upset with Estella's coldness, yet she is responsible for Estella being cold |
When Pip's convict returns, Pip attempts to: | Send the convict on his way |
When Pip finds out that his convict is his benefactor, he is most upset because: | He feels Miss Havisham used him |
The convict calls Pip his: | Son |
Pip is a bad influence on Herbert because: | He overspends and gets into debt |
Miss Skiffins is: | Sometimes found at Walworth |
Pip says that his convict is his: | Uncle |
Pip's convict's names: | Magwitch and Provis |
Compeyson's defense in a court case involving himself and Magwitch includes: | Magwitch was older and more experienced |
Magwitch knew Jaggers long ago when: | Jaggers defended Magwitch in a court case |
After they find out that the convict is Pip's benefactor, Pip and Herbert resolve to: | Not take any more money and find a way to get him out of England |
Pip accuses Miss Havisham of using him to: | Create jealousy in her relatives |
After Pip tells Estella he has loved her for a long time, Estella tries to hurt him by saying: | Saying her heart cannot love, that she warned him about her cold nature, and that she is marrying Drummle |
Wemmick's term for money: | Portable property |
When Pip sees Wopsle perform, Wopsle tells Pip that: | He has seen Compeyson |
When Jaggers defended Molly in court, he suggested that: | She took the life of her child |
Pip visits Miss Havisham once more to: | Tells her he knows much about the past |
Pip tries to get Magwitch on a freighter and the plan failed because: | Pip's convict is arrested after a fight in the water and gains severe injuries |
Magwitch is tried for returning illegally to England, and this happens: | Magwitch dies in the prison, Pip visits him daily, the judge must hang him because "lifers" are condemned, and Pip can't tell if Magwitch understood the news about his daughter |
Pip's seeing the vision of Miss Havisham's body hanging is: | Foreshadowing |
When Pip finds out who his benefactor is, Dickens reveals the nature of Pip's feelings through: | The metaphor of a shipwreck |
Dickens illustrates Jaggers as a man who speaks: | Evasively, indirectly, and hypothetically. |
Dickens does not illustrate the internal conflict inside Pip by saying that: | He is constantly torn between his love for Biddy and his love for Estella |
The weather before the convict enters Pip's apartment is illustrated through: | Foreshadowing, mood, and symbolism |
Estella's reference to her being a candle and men like Drummle as moths, the literary term to describe that is: | Metaphor |
Miss Havisham burning is illustrated by: | Symbolism |
What is symbolized by Magwitch burning the money that Pip gave him? | The money has no meaning to him because Pip does not owe him anything |
Pip's sickness symbolizes: | The purging of his conscience |
The gate at Satis and the drawbridge at Walworth are similar because: | They both represent barriers or borders |
Dickens illustrates that everything is not what it seems with: | Magwitch's appearance in court, Pip's benefactor, Wemmick's life at the Castle, and Pip's impression that Satis is a place of wealth and happiness |
Characters that redeem themselves: | Pip, Miss Havisham, Estella, and Magwitch |
The significance of Orlick being hired for gatekeeper at Satis is that: | Pip is jealous |
Dickens shows that Victorian laws were horrifying by: | The scene where Magwitch and 32 others are sentenced to death |
Closures to the novel: | Wemmick is married, Joe and Biddy start a family, Miss Havisham dies, and Magwitch dies. |
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