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Why Is Miss Havisham Important In Great Expectations

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The fire at Miss Havisham house was heart breaking. Pip visits Miss Havisham, who feels unbearably guilty for having to cause Estella to break his heart. She clings to Pip’s feet, pleading for him to forgive her. Pip acts kindly toward her, and then he goes for a walk in the garden. There, he has a morbid fantasy that Miss Havisham is dead. He looks up at Miss Havishams window just in time to see her bend over the fire and go up in a column of flame. While Pip is rushing in to save her, he sweeps the ancient wedding feast from her table and smothers the flames with the tablecloth. Miss Havisham lives, but she becomes an invalid, a shadow of her former self.

I suppose Dickens included this in the novel because this part makes the readers get involved more. Dickens also included this in the novel because it has more suspense and the readers will start to wonder what will happen next. It’s always best to involve drama into a novel/book because that’s what attracts the readers to keep on reading the books. Also putting the fire part onto the novel wasn’t a bad idea because it caught my attention, it made me read The Great Expectations more and more. …show more content…

The house, just like Miss Havisham is wasting away. Pip first notices that the fire is extinguished; there is no life there. Fire as a symbol can mean many different things. It may represent warmth, understanding, desire, and destruction. In this novel fire plays a big role in making the reader understand more about the characters and the story. In Great Expectations fire was used repeatedly, here are some of my thoughts for the symbolism on the

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