Great Expectations is the story of Pip,
an orphan boy adopted by a blacksmith's family, who has good luck and great
expectations, and then loses both his luck and his expectations. Through this
rise and fall, however, Pip learns how to find happiness. He learns the meaning
of friendship and the meaning of love and, of course, becomes a better person
for it.
The
story opens with the narrator, Pip, who introduces himself and describes a much
younger Pip staring at the gravestones of his parents. This tiny, shivering
bundle of a boy is suddenly terrified by a man dressed in a prison uniform. The
man tells Pip that if he wants to live, he'll go down to his house and bring
him back some food and a file for the shackle on his leg.
Pip
runs home to his sister, Mrs. Joe Gragery, and his adoptive father, Joe
Gragery. Mrs. Joe is a loud, angry, nagging woman who constantly reminds Pip
and her husband Joe of the difficulties she has gone through to raise Pip and
take care of the house. Pip finds solace from these rages in Joe, who is more
his equal than a paternal figure, and they are united under a common
oppression.
Pip
steals food and a pork pie from the pantry shelf and a file from Joe's forge
and brings them back to the escaped convict the next morning. Soon thereafter,
Pip watches the man get caught by soldiers and the whole event soon disappears
from his young mind.
Mrs.
Joe comes home one evening, quite excited, and proclaims that Pip is going to
"play" for Miss Havisham,
"a rich and grim lady who lived in a large and dismal house."
Pip
is brought to Miss Havisham's place, a mansion called the "Satis
House," where sunshine never enters. He meets a girl about his age, Estella,
"who was very pretty and seemed very proud." Pip instantly falls in
love with her and will love her the rest of the story. He then meets Miss
Havisham, a willowy, yellowed old woman dressed in an old wedding gown. Miss
Havisham seems most happy when Estella insults Pip's coarse hands and his thick
boots as they play.
Pip
is insulted, but thinks there is something wrong with him. He vows to change,
to become uncommon, and to become a gentleman.
Pip
continues to visit Estella and Miss Havisham for eight months and learns more
about their strange life. Miss Havisham brings him into a great banquet hall
where a table is set with food and large wedding cake. But the food and the
cake are years old, untouched except by a vast array of rats, beetles and
spiders which crawl freely through the room. Her relatives all come to see her
on the same day of the year: her birthday and wedding day, the day when the
cake was set out and the clocks were stopped many years before; i.e. the day
Miss Havisham stopped living.
Pip
begins to dream what life would be like if he were a gentleman and wealthy.
This dream ends when Miss Havisham asks Pip to bring Joe to visit her, in order
that he may start his indenture as a blacksmith. Miss Havisham gives Joe twenty
five pounds for Pip's service to her and says good-bye.
Pip
explains his misery to his readers: he is ashamed of his home, ashamed of his
trade. He wants to be uncommon, he wants to be a gentleman. He wants to be a
part of the environment that he had a small taste of at the Manor House.
Early
in his indenture, Mrs. Joe is found lying unconscious, knocked senseless by
some unknown assailant. She has suffered some serious brain damage, having lost
much of voice, her hearing, and her memory. Furthermore, her "temper was
greatly improved, and she was patient." To help with the housework and to
take care of Mrs. Joe, Biddy, a
young orphan friend of Pip's, moves into the house.
The
years pass quickly. It is the fourth year of Pip's apprenticeship and he is
sitting with Joe at the pub when they are approached by a stranger. Pip
recognizes him, and his "smell of soap," as a man he had once run
into at Miss Havisham's house years before.
Back
at the house, the man, Jaggers,
explains that Pip now has "great expectations." He is to be given a
large monthly stipend, administered by Jaggers who is a lawyer. The benefactor,
however, does not want to be known and is to remain a mystery.
Pip
spends an uncomfortable evening with Biddy and Joe, then retires to bed. There,
despite having all his dreams come true, he finds himself feeling very lonely.
Pip visits Miss Havisham who hints subtly that she is his unknown sponsor.
Pip
goes to live in London and meets Wemmick,
Jagger's square-mouth clerk. Wemmick brings Pip to Bernard's Inn, where Pip
will live for the next five years with Matthew Pocket's
son Herbert, a cheerful young gentleman that becomes one of Pip's best friends.
From Herbert, Pips finds out that Miss Havisham adopted Estella and raised her
to wreak revenge on the male gender by making them fall in love with her, and
then breaking their hearts.
Pip
is invited to dinner at Wemmick's whose slogan seems to be "Office is one thing,
private life is another." Indeed, Wemmick has a fantastical private life.
Although he lives in a small cottage, the cottage has been modified to look a
bit like a castle, complete with moat, drawbridge, and a firing cannon.
The
next day, Jaggers himself invites Pip and friends to dinner. Pip, on Wemmick's
suggestion, looks carefully at Jagger's servant woman -- a "tigress"
according to Wemmick. She is about forty, and seems to regard Jaggers with a
mix of fear and duty.
Pip
journeys back to the Satis House to see Miss Havisham and Estella, who is now
older and so much more beautiful that he doesn't recognize her at first. Facing
her now, he slips back "into the coarse and common voice" of his
youth and she, in return, treats him like the boy he used to be. Pip sees
something strikingly familiar in Estella's face. He can't quite place the look,
but an expression on her face reminds him of someone.
Pip
stays away from Joe and Biddy's house and the forge, but walks around town,
enjoying the admiring looks he gets from his past neighbors.
Soon
thereafter, a letter for Pip announces the death of Mrs. Joe Gragery. Pip
returns home again to attend the funeral. Later, Joe and Pip sit comfortably by
the fire like times of old. Biddy insinuates that Pip will not be returning
soon as he promises and he leaves insulted. Back in London, Pip asks Wemmick
for advice on how to give Herbert some of his yearly stipend anonymously.
Narrator
Pip describes his relationship to Estella while she lived in the city: "I
suffered every kind and degree of torture that Estella could cause me," he
says. Pip finds out that Drummle,
the most repulsive of his acquaintances, has begun courting Estella.
Years
go by and Pip is still living the same wasteful life of a wealthy young man in
the city. A rough sea-worn man of sixty comes to Pip's home on a stormy night
soon after Pip's twenty-fourth birthday. Pip invites him in, treats him with
courteous disdain, but then begins to recognize him as the convict that he fed
in the marshes when he was a child. The man, Magwitch,
reveals that he is Pip's benefactor. Since the day that Pip helped him, he
swore to himself that every cent he earned would go to Pip.
"I've
made a gentleman out of you," the man exclaims. Pip is horrified. All of
his expectations are demolished. There is no grand design by Miss Havisham to
make Pip happy and rich, living in harmonious marriage to Estella.
The
convict tells Pip that he has come back to see him under threat of his life,
since the law will execute him if they find him in England. Pip is disgusted
with him, but wants to protect him and make sure he isn't found and put to death.
Herbert and Pip decide that Pip will try and convince Magwitch to leave England
with him.
Magwitch
tells them the story of his life. From a very young age, he was alone and got
into trouble. In one of his brief stints actually out of jail, Magwitch met a
young well-to-do gentleman named Compeyson who had his hand in everything
illegal: swindling, forgery, and other white collar crime. Compeyson recruited
Magwitch to do his dirty work and landed Magwitch into trouble with the law.
Magwitch hates the man. Herbert passes a note to Pip telling him that Compeyson
was the name of the man who left Miss Havisham on her wedding day.
Pip
goes back to Satis House and finds Miss Havisham and Estella in the same
banquet room. Pip breaks down and confesses his love for Estella. Estella tells
him straight that she is incapable of love -- she has warned him of as much
before -- and she will soon be married to Drummle.
Back
in London, Wemmick tells Pip things he has learned from the prisoners at
Newgate. Pip is being watched, he says, and may be in some danger. As well,
Compeyson has made his presence known in London. Wemmick has already warned
Herbert as well. Heeding the warning, Herbert has hidden Magwitch in his fiancé Clara's
house.
Pip
has dinner with Jaggers and Wemmick at Jaggers' home. During the dinner, Pip
finally realizes the similarities between Estella and Jaggers' servant woman.
Jaggers' servant woman is Estella's mother!
On
their way home together, Wemmick tells the story of Jaggers' servant woman. It
was Jaggers' first big break-through case, the case that made him. He was
defending this woman in a case where she was accused of killing another woman
by strangulation. The woman was also said to have killed her own child, a girl,
at about the same time as the murder.
Miss
Havisham asks Pip to come visit her. He finds her again sitting by the fire,
but this time she looks very lonely. Pip tells her how he was giving some of
his money to help Herbert with his future, but now must stop since he himself
is no longer taking money from his benefactor. Miss Havisham wants to help, and
she gives Pip nine hundred pounds to help Herbert out. She then asks Pip for
forgiveness. Pip tells her she is already forgiven and that he needs too much
forgiving himself not to be able to forgive others.
Pip
goes for a walk around the garden then comes back to find Miss Havisham on
fire! Pip puts the fire out, burning himself badly in the process. The doctors
come and announce that she will live.
Pip
goes home and Herbert takes care of his burns. Herbert has been spending some
time with Magwitch at Clara's and has been told the whole Magwitch story.
Magwitch was the husband of Jaggers' servant woman, the Tigress. The woman had
come to Magwitch on the day she murdered the other woman and told him she was
going to kill their child and that Magwitch would never see her. And Magwitch
never did. Pip puts is all together and tells Herbert that Magwitch is
Estella's father.
It
is time to escape with Magwitch. Herbert and Pip get up the next morning and
start rowing down the river, picking up Magwitch at the preappointed time. They
are within a few feet of a steamer that they hope to board when another boat
pulls alongside to stop them. In the confusion, Pip sees Compeyson leading the
other boat, but the steamer is on top of them. The steamer crushes Pip's boat,
Compeyson and Magwitch disappear under water, and Pip and Herbert find
themselves in a police boat of sorts. Magwitch finally comes up from the water.
He and Compeyson wrestled for a while, but Magwitch had let him go and he is
presumably drowned. Once again, Magwitch is shackled and arrested.
Magwitch
is in jail and quite ill. Pip attends to the ailing Magwitch daily in prison.
Pip whispers to him one day that the daughter he thought was dead is quite
alive. "She is a lady and very beautiful," Pip says. "And I love
her." Magwitch gives up the ghost.
Pip
falls into a fever for nearly a month. Creditors and Joe fall in and out of his
dreams and his reality. Finally, he regains his senses and sees that, indeed,
Joe has been there the whole time, nursing him back to health. Joe tells him
that Miss Havisham died during his illness, that she left Estella nearly all,
and Matthew Pocket a great deal. Joe slips away one morning leaving only a
note. Pip discovers that Joe has paid off all his debtors.
Pip
is committed to returning to Joe, asking for forgiveness for everything he has
done, and to ask Biddy to marry him. Pip goes to Joe and indeed finds happiness
-- but the happiness is Joe and Biddy's. It is their wedding day. Pip wishes
them well, truly, and asks them for their forgiveness in all his actions. They
happily give it.
Pip
goes to work for Herbert's' firm and lives with the now married Clara and
Herbert. Within a year, he becomes a partner. He pays off his debts and works
hard.
Eleven
years later, Pip returns from his work overseas. He visits Joe and Biddy and
meets their son, a little Pip, sitting by the fire with Joe just like Pip
himself did years ago. Pip tells Biddy that he is quite the settled old
bachelor, living with Clara and Herbert and he thinks he will never marry.
Nevertheless, he goes to the Satis House that night to think once again of the
girl who got away. And there he meets Estella. Drummle treated her roughly and
recently died. She tells Pip that she has learned the feeling of heartbreak the
hard way and now seeks his forgiveness for what she did to him. The two walk
out of the garden hand in hand, and Pip "saw the shadow of no parting from
her."
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