Answer:
The overall impression the description gives is that the house is forbidding and a bit frightening.
Step-by-step explanation:
In the lines we are analyzing from "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens, the house seems forbidding and frightening due to the imagery and the word choice. The author appeals to the readers' senses when he describes the wind as being cold (touch) and howling (hearing). The fact that the wind is colder as it blows in and out of the house than it is outside of the gates also causes a terror-like impression, as if something ominous hides in the house. Besides that, an adjective such as shrill to describe the noise can make picturing the scene more disturbing, since people tend to dislike shrill noises.