COPEYSON
Orlick
Love <3
Sure, it's fine... provided you aren't the groom, bride or officiant.
jarvis lorry and miss pross
In chapter 12 he worries that she will shoot him dead
Miss Havisham's manor is called Satis House.
The two people who attended Lucie Manette's wedding as described in "A Tale of Two Cities" other than her father and the groom were Mr. Lorry and Sydney Carton.
Miss Havisham's hand is paralyzed and withered, as a result of her shock and trauma after being betrayed on her wedding day. This physical manifestation reflects her emotional state and the frozen moment in time when she was left at the altar.
Miss Havisham is portrayed as an elderly woman who appears ghostly and decayed. She is described as skeletal and with a ghostly complexion, dressed in an old, decaying wedding gown. Her physical appearance mirrors her emotional and mental state of being trapped in the past.
Miss Havisham was the character who was jilted on her wedding day in "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens. She was left at the altar by her fiancé, Compeyson. This traumatic event had a lasting impact on Miss Havisham, leading her to live a reclusive and vengeful life.
Pip was taken to meet Miss Havisham by his elder sister, Mrs. Joe, who thought it would provide Pip with an opportunity to improve his station in life.