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3 votes
In the Passage, why would Miss Havisham's

wedding experience have been life-altering from
her point of view as a woman in the Victorian
era?
1.She would feel empowered by her single status.
2.She would have to give up her home.
3.She would be publicly humiliated.
4.She would inherit a great deal more money.
HELP ASAP!!!

User Pyjong
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2 Answers

7 votes

Answer: C, She would be publicly humiliated

Explanation: I did the I-Ready test

User Rajmohan
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3.9k points
5 votes

Answer:

3. She would be publicly humiliated.

Step-by-step explanation:

Charles Dickens' novel Great Expectations tells the story of an orphan boy named Pip. Despite his childhood of poverty, through a secret benefactor, he became a respectable gentleman and came back for Estella.

Miss Havisham is the guardian of Estella. Pip had visited them when he was a young boy. In Chapter XXII, Mr. Herbert was telling Pip about Miss Havisham who had been engaged to be married to a man named Compeyson. But on the day of their wedding, the groom sent a note telling her that he will not be present for the wedding. This event would have embarrassed her, more like left her mortified so much that she did not even move out of the house or seen the sun. She even set the time of her clocks to the exact time she was jilted- "twenty minutes to nine". This experienced would have publicly humiliated her, for a woman during the Victorian era.

Thus, the correct answer is option 3.

User Jlahd
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2.6k points