Answer:
I'm guessing your trying to say: At the beginning of Chapter six, why does Pip feel bad? then:
Joe, Pip, and Mr. Wopsle walk back home. Pop decides not to tell Joe the truth about his file and the pork pie -- he is afraid of losing his respect. Pip's fear that Joe would "think worse of me than I was" if Pip told him about the file and pork pie is a fear that Pip will revisit throughout his young life. Joe is the only friend in the world for Pip, he is his entire society. Pip fears to lose this companionship by telling the truth. In the future, Pip will struggle with telling the truth because of the fear that society will think less of him.
Pip's sense of guilt has an adverse effect on his relationship with Joe in these early chapters. Joe has always been very good to him but Pip still feels quite unable to confide in him. During dinner, when Pip feels obliged to secretly store away some food to take to the convict, he is terribly uptight and therefore unable to respond to Joe's usual friendliness. Joe is puzzled by this, and even more by the fact that the food Pip takes is disappearing very fast. He thinks Pip is gorging himself. This makes for some comedy, but in the main Pip's secret sense of fear and shame dominates these pages. Pip feels even more guilty as he has to steal a file belonging to Joe, at the convict's request.
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