The two one pound notes act as one of a series of symbols
that remind Pip of his criminal associations from his youth, harking back to his act of
helping Magwitch in the marshes and his own act of robbery in stealing food and a file
for him so he could eat and remove his ball and chain. The two one pound notes occur in
Chapter 10 when Pip and Joe are in the Jolly Bargeman with a stranger, who seems to pay
lots of attention to Pip. Note his actions:
readability="11">
It was not a verbal remark, but a prodeeding in
dumb show, and was pointedly addressed to me. He stirred his rum-and-water pointedly at
me, and he tasted his rum-and-water pointedly at me. And he stirred it and he tasted it:
not with a spoon that was brought to him, but with a
file.
Pip recognises that
this file is the one he stole and gave to Magwitch and thus recognises that this man
knew Magwitch. At the end of the night, the man insists on giving Pip a "bright new
shilling" for Pip to have as his "own" which he wraps in some paper. It is only when
they arrive back home that they discover that the paper it is wrapped in is actually two
one pound notes, described as follows:
readability="6">
Nothing less than two fat sweltering one-pound
notes that seemed to have been on terms of the warmest intimacy with the cattle markets
in the country.
Note how the
description of these notes as "fat" and "sweltering" seems to convey the criminal
associations that they have for Pip, and this image of his past that he is unable to
escape re-appears again in Chapter 28 when he rides with two prisoners. He overhears one
of them tell the other about being asked to take the two one pound notes to a boy in the
marshes. The novel seems to suggest that sometimes we cannot escape our guilty past - in
fact, it repeatedly returns to haunt us.
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