The Manor House or Satis House
Miss Havisham's house was named Satis House.
Miss Havisham's manor is called Satis House.
COPEYSON
Orlick
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Pip was there originally to keep Miss Havisham company and also to play with Estella which Miss Havisham enjoyed watching.
The man that Pip fought with at Miss Havisham's house is Orlick. Orlick is a bitter, hostile character who harbors resentment towards Pip and has a history of being aggressive.
In chapter 12 he worries that she will shoot him dead
Estella was studying abroad[:
When Pip came to Miss Havisham's house, the person in the room with her was Estella, who was being raised by Miss Havisham to break men's hearts. Estella played a significant role in Pip's life and their interactions were often a central focus of the story.
Miss Havisham's home in Great Expectations is called Satis House. Satis means 'enough' in Latin. Her house is big and could have been a beautiful manor that would have everything needed to live provided for Miss Havisham without leaving the property. However, the name of this house is ironic because she fails to keep the house in good condition, and it decays. The house is no longer good 'enough' for anyone to live in.
Pip is unable to play at Miss Havisham's house because he is a common boy and she is a wealthy, eccentric woman who maintains a strict separation between herself and the outside world. Miss Havisham believes that Pip is not of her social class and therefore not suitable to play with her adopted daughter, Estella.
Pip was to be a playmate for Miss Havisham's adopted daughter Estella and to receive gentlemanly grooming and education in the hopes that he would become a suitable husband for Estella in the future.