Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Mrs Joe. Pip’s elder sister, Mrs Joe is married to Joe Gargery and has brought Pip up ‘by hand’ which has the dual meaning of ‘by herself’ and ‘with smacks’ (Ch. 2, p. 5). She is scornful of Joe, calling him a ‘dunder-headed king of the noodles’ (Ch. 15, p. 110). She feels hard-done-by and both Pip and Joe are victims of her ...

  2. Mrs. Joe, who is now unable to talk, begins to draw the letter “T” on her slate over and over, which Pip guesses represents a hammer. From this, Biddy deduces that she is referring to Orlick. Orlick is called in to see Mrs. Joe, and Pip expects her to denounce him as her attacker.

  3. The novel's hero, Pip is an orphan who lives with his harsh and selfish sister Mrs. Joe and serves as the apprentice of her gentle blacksmith husband Joe. Pip is sensitive and intellectually curious…

  4. Pip feels terribly guilty for his snobbish treatment of Joe and Biddy, and he feels as though his degenerate lifestyle has been a bad influence on Herbert. The two young men catalog their debts, but they are interrupted by a letter carrying the news that Mrs. Joe has died. Summary: Chapter 35

  5. Feb 16, 2004 · Upon returning from his encounter with the convict, an already terrified Pip arrives home to the wrath of someone else. His brother-in-law Joe informs him that Mrs. Joe and her weapon of corporal punishment, “Tickler," are on a rampage designed for the young boy.

  6. People also ask

  7. Mrs. Joe's last words seem to imply an apology to Joe and Pip, presumably for her abusiveness before the accident. Orlick's behavior is highly suspicious.

  1. People also search for