Preview

Mister Pip

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
470 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Mister Pip
The obvious challenge of teaching young children, starving for a distraction from ever-present turmoil, is not the only difficulty that Mr. Watts faces. Dolores, Matilda's overzealous Christian mother, expresses an extreme distrust of the teacher and his curriculum. She does everything in her power to ensure that her daughter's mind is not polluted by the strange white man, including making weekly visits to the classroom. She even goes as far as stealing and hiding Dickens' Great Expectations, an action that causes immense trouble when redskin soldiers enter the village and find Mr. Pip's name carved into the sand. Coincidently, it is Matilda who wrote his name, and it is her guilt that makes her empathize with her mother, who refuses to give up the book as evidence of Pip as a fictional character. Convinced that this Mr. Pip must be a spy who has been hidden from them, the redskins destroy the houses. All they leave behind are smoking fragments of Matilda's former life.

As the tension escalates even further, a group of rebel soldiers returns to the village to question the only remaining white man, Mr. Watts. He agrees to explain himself over the course of five nights, and proceeds to tell a story that entwines Pip's life even further with his own. Matilda develops an idea about why he returned to the island with his wife and stayed after all the other whites left. Now that his wife has died, Mr. Watts considers moving on and offers Matilda a chance to escape from the island. However, she would have to choose between Mr. Watts and her mother but before this can happen the rebels flee and the redskin soldiers return.

This time the soldiers kill Mr. Watts, and when Matilda's mother speaks up she is taken away. Matilda is almost raped, but her mother gives up her life to spare her. In the wake of surviving the slaughter of her village, her mother and Mr. Watts, Matilda loses her will to live. She nearly drowns, but is revived by the memory of Pip, who also

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Mister

    • 1185 Words
    • 13 Pages

    N029118 – Conforming to General Health, Safety and Welfare in the Workplace – Issue 1…

    • 1185 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mr Dolphus Raymond Quotes

    • 1058 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Mrs. Henry Lafayette Dubose, is identified to the Finch children as the cranky old lady down the street who yells insults at the children. She torments them on everything they say and do; one day…

    • 1058 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pip continues to remember his visit and later goes on to detail an even scarier description: a “faded spectre in the chair by the dressing-table glass….” Pip is comparing Miss Havisham to a ghost, seemingly unreal and unrelatable to a mortal human. He has a lack of connection to Miss Havisham, seeing her as something static and unchanging, like an old house or a room, in contrast to how he views himself, dynamic and changing. Next, Pip discusses how he feels the “stopping of the clocks had stopped Time in that mysterious place….” Again, everything around Pip is changing: he’s apprenticed to Joe, it’s his birthday, and Biddy moved in with his family, but Miss Havisham and her property remain the same. Estella’s feelings towards Pip hasn’t changed either, as she is still as cold and distant as she was the first time she met Pip. The strangeness of Miss Havisham and her manor astonishes Pip, and, despite him being dreadfully afraid of them, he still feels himself looking closer and becoming more and more fascinated and obsessed with them. This attraction towards Miss Havisham surfaces later in the novel, when Pip becomes convinced that Miss Havisham has a plan for him and Estella together despite having no evidence of…

    • 445 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fever 1793 Quotes

    • 298 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The characters actions and words toward their families change during the book. At first Matilda dislikes her mother because her mother gives her tough love. “‘When I was a girl, we were up before the sun…’” Matilda’s mom is harsh to her but it’s for the better of family. When Matilda's mom contracts the yellow fever, Matilda stays to help her even when her mother wants her to leave and…

    • 298 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pip became a part of Clint's act until the night the circus burnt down. They watched the flames light up the sky like some sort of sick fireworks show for a while, but nobody noticed the kid and his bird slip into the night of sirens and shouts.…

    • 327 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Simple Gift Text Analysis

    • 845 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Billy feels distanced from his father, school, his town and the community. Josie feels different towards her family as she does not relate to her Italian heritage or fit in with her Australian friends either. The aspect of not belonging in Matilda is within her very own family. These all pushed them on to the path of belonging.…

    • 845 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    With the coming arrival of Harriet’s pregnancy, she has her first child but then moves to go live with her grandmother because Mrs. Norcom is furious with her pregnancy. Even after her second child she still is living with her grandmother. But, Dr. Norcom is getting very impatient and tells Harriet to either move into a cottage he built for her or go live on his son’s land and she will have to sell her kids. Harriet picks to go live on the land but instead of having to sell her kids she runs away to a friend’s and hides there for some weeks. Harriet moves to a couple of different places for a while but then finally ends up in a small garret cut up above her grandmother’s house. Dr. Norcom gets mad because he can’t find Harriet so, he arrests her brother, aunt, and kids to Sawyer. Harriet then starts to write letters to Dr. Norcom, trying to convince him that she is living in New York. Harriet hopes and prays everyday that Samuel Sawyer will free her kids, but he doesn’t do that, instead he takes their daughter and gives her to a cousin in New York as a servant. Harriet has the chance to escape on a ship to the north but decides not to because of her grandmother’s fear that she…

    • 475 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fever 1793

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Minutes later, Matilda learns of Polly’s death from an illness, with a symptom being a fever. She is outraged and takes her mother’s statement to heart. Matilda wants to know why Polly had to die and asks her mother “What about the funeral? You must let me attend that.”(16) Surprisingly, her mother says “No. Absolutely not. I forbid it. You’ll have nightmares”(16) which makes Matilda even more upset. She only wants to say goodbye to her long known friend and she is being kept from Polly and her illness. Yet, coming from Matilda’s mother’s point of view, she is keeping Matilda safe from Polly’s illness. This is Matilda’s reward for loving Polly according to her mother.…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Book Review/ Essay

    • 536 Words
    • 3 Pages

    After she arrives at the plantation she tries to save a baby from murder. She gets close to the other slaves, and makes a new friend, Polly, an indentured servant. Polly and Amari plan to make sure that Mr. Derby, the cruel and spiteful owner of the plantation does not know that his wife, Isabelle, the owner's wife, had an affair with one of his slaves, and that she is pregnant with a black child. Amari and Polly deliver the newborn and they figure out that they will hide her. They tell the master that the baby died. The master though finds out about the infant and he kills the baby in front of his wife. Amari is shocked. She thinks all has passed Mr. Derby kills the baby’s father, one of the black slaves, too. Amari learns that she must remain hopeful, even after what she saw that dreadful night.…

    • 536 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She wants to find love in the 3 male characters: the uncle, Peter Quint, and even Miles towards the end of the novel. She starts with having an attraction of the uncle and then she moves towards Peter Quint which she then becomes obsessed with and starts seeing his ghost. Finally, at the end of the novel she begins to look to Miles for a sense of belonging. It may even seem as if she wants to find love so badly that she smothers him to the point of death and kills him. He also may have died because she frightened him to death. In the last few scenes, the governess seems to frighten the boy so badly, they he starts sweating and breathing hard and she even starts to shake him. She longs for love so terribly that she believes Miles is Peter Quint. Finally, the governess has a "victory" at the end of the novel and she finally is able to control and manage everything she wanted to know before. The governess and her unreliable narrator poses far too many questions for answers but all the clues point to her infatuation being so strong in Bly, that she needs to have a feeling of…

    • 1224 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Pip of "Great Expectations" is orphaned and is raised by his sister, Mrs. Gargery, who is not especially fond of him, beating him repeatedly with "Tickler." Consequently, Pip spends time alone and visits the graves of his parents in the lonely spot on the marshes. Although his has been a more oppressed life than that of Pip, the convict has grown up without real parents and has been knocked from one spot to another…

    • 2325 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In this essay I am going to focus on Pip meeting the convict in the graveyard in Chapter 1. Pip’s home life with Joe and Mrs Joe. Pip meeting Estella and Miss Haversham at Satis house in Chapter 8. Pip fights the pale young gentleman (Herbert Pocket) at Satis House in Chapter 11.…

    • 1316 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Best Essays

    Mini Pip

    • 2546 Words
    • 11 Pages

    For my research report, I have chosen to research the evolution of society’s fashion on the adolescent girl. Through the rising of hemlines and revealing garments, to discover how it has impacted on forming an adolescent girl’s own self of identity. I believe fashion is an everyday movement and an express of art; a way of showing your feeling and emotions without a sense of smile or frown.…

    • 2546 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Better Essays

    ‘Great expectations’ is a novel written during and set in the Victorian era, a time in which status, class and money were extremely important and where a discrepancy between the rich and poor was evident. The novel follows the ill-fated life of the protagonist in the novel, ‘Pip’. Dickens writes in such a way that each character is a subject of either sympathy or scorn. Dickens implies that Pip is a subject of sympathy through his use of guilt and suffering. Dickens also uses powerful vocabulary to create a poignant image of Pip and his surroundings. The story itself is narrated by middle aged Pip and Dickens intentionally uses him so that we see the story through the perspective of Pip as a child and an adult. Dickens even uses Pip’s name as an indication of his stature and future actions, ‘Pip’ could be seen as a small apple seed that grows into a large tree. As well as ‘pirrip’, a palindrome, being conceived as the word ‘rip’ placed symmetrically symbolising his character ripping into different personalities as he grows.…

    • 1211 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    During the first extract we get to see that Pip is an orphan after he says: As I never saw my father or my mother.. (for their days were long before the days of photographs), we recognise that he unfortunately lost both his mother and father along with five brothers he once had, who passed away whilst they were still infants. The only family Pip had, was his older sister Mrs Joe Gargery and her husband who was a Blacksmith. He had lived with them both for most of his life, his sister treats him dreadfully as all she sees Pip as is a waste of space in her household. Whilst her husband - Joe Gargery, treats Pip like he was his own flesh and blood. We now get the chance to begin to see the hard and upsetting life Pip leads and what he has gone through in the past. We start to feel sympathy for Pip, as not many children would have to go through the same experience as he once did.…

    • 1825 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics