1 / 7

Coincidences

Coincidences. Great Expectations Chapter 20-23. Herbert Pocket/ Matthew Pocket. Herbert Pocket = pale young gentleman Herbert Pocket is the “pale young gentleman” with whom Pip fought in the courtyard of Miss Havisham’s many years ago.

xylia
Download Presentation

Coincidences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Coincidences Great Expectations Chapter 20-23

  2. Herbert Pocket/ Matthew Pocket • Herbert Pocket = pale young gentleman • Herbert Pocket is the “pale young gentleman” with whom Pip fought in the courtyard of Miss Havisham’s many years ago. • Matthew = Herbert’s father = Miss Havisham’s first cousin= Pip’s teacher. • Herbert’s father (Matthew Pocket) is Miss Havisham’s first cousin. He was NOT present at Miss Havisham’s birthday dinner, taking place many years ago. • Matthew Pocket will be Pip’s teacher/ tutor in London (Hammersmith).

  3. Miss Havisham’s Background • Was the spoilt child of a country brewer. (gentleman). • Her mother died at a young age; Miss Havisham’s father spoiled his daughter and denied her nothing. • He later remarried and had a child with his new wife. They bore a son (Arthur).

  4. Arthur Havisham • Arthur Havisham grew to be a bad man. He was a bit of a con-artist, a philanderer, and even a bit of a criminal. • He was at one point disinherited from his father’s (Miss Havisham’s father’s) will. • As his father reached old age, Arthur convinced him to write Arthur back into his will. • He didn’t inherit as much money as Miss Havisham, but he managed to inherit enough to be “comfortable.”

  5. Miss Havisham’s “courtship” • Arthur Havisham had a “friend” that became very interested in Arthur’s sister (Miss Havisham). • Pp.101 This “friend” was NOT a gentleman and was a bit showy, but he courted Miss Havisham closely and professed his love to her. • Miss Havisham’s boyfriend convinced Miss Havisham to take her money and buy her brother out of his shares in the brewery. He convinced her that when they were married, HE (the boyfriend) would run and control the brewery. • Matthew Pocket saw that Miss Havisham’s boyfriend had bad intentions and warned her against this marriage. She became angry, threw Matthew out of the house.

  6. Twenty minutes to Nine • Miss Havisham planned a wedding to her “boyfriend.” She had invited guests, planned a party, bought a dress… • On the day of the wedding, when Miss Havisham was putting on her wedding dress, she received a letter from “HIM” at “twenty-minutes-to-nine”. This letter “heartlessly” broke off the engagement.

  7. The Conspiracy • It turns out that Miss Havisham’s “boyfriend” had been working with Arthur Havisham all along. They had planned to scam Miss Havisham by having her buy her shares from her brother, and they would split the profits intended for Arthur. • Both men have disappeared.

More Related