Illustration of Pip visiting a graveyard

Great Expectations

by Charles Dickens

Start Free Trial

Great Expectations Questions on Mr. Wopsle

Great Expectations

In Great Expectations, Charles Dickens employs humor and irony to create memorable characterizations. Characters like Uncle Pumblechook and Mr. Wopsle are exaggerated for comedic effect, while the...

5 educator answers

Great Expectations

Biddy is the one who really teaches a little bit at the educational institution run by Mr. Wopsle's great-aunt in Great Expectations.

1 educator answer

Great Expectations

Mr. Wopsle and Uncle Pumblechook in Great Expectations serve as comic relief and social satire. Mr. Wopsle, a church clerk with a pompous love for his own voice, later becomes a laughably poor actor....

1 educator answer

Great Expectations

Pip is dissatisfied with Mr. Wopsle's great-aunt's school because it is poorly run and ineffective. The great-aunt often falls asleep during classes, leaving the students unsupervised to misbehave....

1 educator answer

Great Expectations

In Great Expectations, the audience reaction to "Hamlet" is generally unenthusiastic and inattentive. The characters in the novel attend the performance but show little genuine interest or...

2 educator answers

Great Expectations

Both incidents in "Great Expectations" highlight themes of self-deception and social pretension. Pip is mocked by Trabb's boy for his snobbish airs, reflecting his failure to see his own...

1 educator answer

Great Expectations

Biddy advises Pip against aspiring to be a gentleman, suggesting he might be happier as he is, reflecting Dickens's view on social class. Uncle Pumblechook, a snob, tells Pip to be grateful to his...

1 educator answer