Pip first encounters the convict when he is visiting the churchyard at his parents grave. The convict had escaped from the prison ship and needed food. He saw pip and threatened to cut his heart and liver out, so pip followed his orders and stole a pie from the pantry, and a file from joe's shop and gave them to the convict the next morning.
Pip is arrested in "Great Expectations" because he is framed for helping an escaped convict, Magwitch. Although Pip was just trying to help Magwitch, the authorities believe him to be an accomplice and arrest him. Additionally, Compeyson, another convict, falsely accuses Pip of being involved in a criminal scheme to have him arrested.
As Pip and Joe follow the soldiers who are bring the convict back to the ship, the convict asks for one more word before he is locked up. He tells the soldiers and Joe that he had taken the food and file from Joe's house. He lies for Pip who actually did these things.
Primarily because he's terrified of the convict and is afraid not only for his own safety, but that of Joe and Mrs. Joe, who the convict threatened to hurt.
he is arrested for debt and then joe help pay it
He threatens to kill Pip by eating his heart and liver. He also says that he has a friend who can hurt him also.
Pip stole some food and a file.
Because the convict ate to many pubes.
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A palindrome for hero of "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens is Pip.
Pip's real name in Great Expectations is Philip Pirrip. He is known as Pip throughout most of the novel.
A knight named Sir Pip.
Pip, also known as Philip Pirrip, was the narrator of the novel Great Expectations. The story is narrated over several years, beginning with Pip's childhood and then as he grows.
The benefactor of Pip in "Great Expectations" is revealed to be Abel Magwitch, an escaped convict whom Pip had helped in the past.
Pip received a letter informing him that he has come into a large fortune and has great expectations.
In Great Expectations, the word "guardian" specifically refers to Abel Magwitch, who becomes Pip's secret benefactor and guardian. Magwitch, a convict who Pip helps as a child, is revealed to be the mysterious benefactor supporting Pip's expectations.
English, for he does not have a slur in his speech like Magwitch. In the film adaptations of Great Expectations, Pip has a British accent (or is played by someone British).
Mrs. Joe, Pip's sister, is one of the antagonists in Great Expectations.
Phillip Pirrip
Pip from "Great Expectations" is mentioned in S.E. Hinton's novel "The Outsiders" in Chapter 11. Ponyboy references Pip when he is discussing the differences between the greasers and the Socs with Cherry.
At dinner in "Great Expectations," Mr. Jaggers reveals to Pip that Miss Havisham is the secret benefactress behind his expectations. This revelation changes Pip's perception of his life and propels the story forward.