The Symbol of the Satis House
-Blog Post 5-
Topic G
by Thomas Olson
In Charles Dickens' Great Expectations,The Satis House is the home of Mrs. Havisham and Estella;however, the house is a symbol of Mrs. Havisham’s life. The house itself is a beautiful Gothic manor that gives Pip the idea of how the wealthy are in life, which is a romanticized vision of the wealthy, and this plays into Pip’s idea of becoming a gentleman. Also attached to the house is a brewery which represents the fact that Mrs. Havisham’s wealth did not come from an old fortune, but rather from the Industrial Revolution. The exterior and interior of the house represents how Mrs. Havisham’s being scammed has affected her life because on the interior of the house it is a time capsule with Mrs. Havisham at the center; the exterior of the house is new, but is not maintained well and it gives an impression that this place is frozen in time with ivy that “ much of it trailed low in the dust and was withered away already” (430). When Mrs. Havisham dies the Satis House is auctioned off all of its materials inside and outside the house. This represents the death of Mrs. Havisham and the fact that her time capsule of a house has fallen with all of her woes being carried out of it. When Pip returns and the house is completely gone with the exception of the wall of the garden, and this shows that Mrs. Havisham’s spirit has gone away from the house because her house made into a prison has fallen ;also, the wall represents Estella who has had a difficult life after she left the house, and the garden is where Pip fought Herbert which one of Estella's favorite memories of the Satis House.