Oliver, Nancy and Miss Ross are all representatives of kindness. They were all born in misery and grew up in a world of darkness and sin. However, a pure world and a kind heart have always been maintained in their hearts. All kinds of hardships can't make them degenerate or completely degenerate, but they show their dazzling and sparkling qualities.
In the end, evil prevailed over evil. Although Nancy was finally killed, it was her death that summoned the earth-shattering power of social justice, and it was her spirit in heaven that doomed the representative of evil forces-Fagin Gang. Therefore, in the novel, Nancy's spirit is sublimated, and Oliver is rewarded in a typical sense. The representatives of the wicked-Fagin, monks, Bambur and Essex all came to a tragic end.
Dickens described the miserable life of poor children in capitalist society, exposed the darkness of workhouse and school education, and mercilessly exposed and lashed the darkness and hypocrisy of capitalist society. ?
The introduction of characters in the novel:
1.? Oliver. Retreat, hero
2. Mrs. Singham, a nurse in the workhouse
3. Mrs Mann, director of foster families in the workhouse branch.
4. Susan, a female worker of foster families in the workhouse branch.
5. Mr Bambur, suburban police officer.
6. Mr. Linkins, the cook of the workhouse.
7.ganfield, chimney cleaner
8. Charlotte, a female worker in a funeral shop
9. Tripp, a worker in a funeral home
10. Bill, grave digger
1 1. Baden, poor family, daughter starved to death.
12. Sabri, funeral director
13. Baden, poor family, daughter starved to death.
14. Noah Crabbe, student of charity school, worker of funeral home.
15. Dick Oliver's children in the foster care center.
16. Jack. Duggins, nicknamed smart card, thief
17. Charlie. Bates the thief
18. Fagin, the thief's head.
19. Betty, a young female thief.
20. Nancy, female thief
2 1. Fan An, the magistrate of public security
22. Brown Rowe, an old gentleman, had his handkerchief stolen while buying a book.
23. Tom? White, the police made up Oliver's name
24. Bill Sykes, the thief's head
25. Mrs. Bedwin seems to be the housekeeper of the Browns.
26. Barney, Jew, thief
27. Miss Dutch and Nancy the thief.
28. William Sikes, Bill? Sykes
29. Greenwig is a gentleman and a friend of Mr. Brown. He has a strange temper.
30. Tom? Thief Kitnin was locked up for 42 days.
3 1. Toby. Glackett, thief, nickname: playboy
32. Luther, chimney sweeper
33. Mrs Kony, director of the workhouse.
34. Mr Glenn Park Jung Su, P 152.
35. Sally, the nurse who delivered Oliver in the workhouse.
36. Martha, a nurse in the workhouse
37. Annie, a nurse in the workhouse.
38. Lively, the owner of a stolen goods store.
39. Phil Barker, the thief, Luli tried to kill him, but Fagin didn't think it was necessary to do it in a hurry.
40. Monks, thief
4 1. Slut, the director of the workhouse, died.
42. Mrs. Mailer, the mistress of the house that Sykes took Oliver to steal.
43. Miss Ruth, Mrs Mele's niece.
44. Chersi, housekeeper of Mrs Mele's house.
45. Brithell, Mrs Mailer's favourite.
46. Ross Burleigh, surgeon
47. Harry? Miller, Mrs. Miller's son.
48. Brassers, a police officer at the London Misdemeanor Court, said.
49. Dafu, a police officer at the London Misdemeanor Court, said.
50. Pat, a thief in London, is a master of theft.
5 1.Chekho Wade, nicknamed big chimney, pub owner and fraudster.
52. Police officer Jim spitz is in charge of investigating Coward Wade's inside job theft.
53.Joy, the waiter in the hotel.
54. Morris? Poulter, Krepol, introduced himself to Fagin under a pseudonym.
55. Bain, courier
56. Harry, peddler, quack
57. Hae-jun Lee Ford, formerly known as monks, is a pen name monks.
58. Bucket, thief
Agnes Fleming, Oliver's mother
Edwin? Lefort, Oliver and Monks' father.
Oliver Twist is a realistic novel published by British writer Dickens on 1838. This work is set in the foggy city of London and tells the tragic life and experience of an orphan. Oliver, the protagonist, grew up in an orphanage, experienced an apprenticeship, fled hard, strayed into a thief's den, and was forced to associate with vicious murderers. Finally, with the help of good people, he found his own life experience and obtained happiness.
This book reveals many social problems at that time, such as workhouses, child labor, gangs absorbing teenagers to participate in crimes, etc. The book has been adapted into movies, TV and stage plays many times.
Content introduction:
Oliver Twist, the hero of the novel, is an orphan born in a workhouse, suffering from hunger and bullying. He fled to London alone because he was abused by the coffin shop owner and parish deacon Bon Bulf, but he was tricked into a thief's den as soon as he arrived. Fagin, the leader of the thieves' gang, tried his best to train Oliver as a pickpocket and let him drive. Oliver was shopping with the thief's companion "A Smart Card" and Bates when he stole a handkerchief from a gentleman named Brownlow (who happened to be his father's good friend before his death) and was arrested by the police. Later, because the owner of the book stall proved his innocence, it showed that the thief was someone else, so he was released.
Because he was very ill and delirious at that time, and his appearance resembled the portrait of a young woman left by a friend before his death, Brownlow took him in for treatment at home, and he was taken care of by Brownlow and his housekeeper, Mrs. Bidwin, and felt the warmth of the world for the first time. The thieves' gang was afraid that Oliver would reveal the secrets of the gang. Under Fagin's instructions, when Oliver went out to return the bookseller's books for Brownlow, Sikes and Nancy tried their best to get him back to the thief's den.
But when Fagin tried to punish Oliver for beating him, Nancy stepped forward to protect Oliver. Fagin tried to force Oliver to become a thief and a cash cow by threats, inducements and indoctrination.
One night, Oliver was involved in the theft of a big house under the coercion of Sikes. Just as Oliver climbed into the window to report to his master, he was shot and wounded by the housekeeper. The thief ran away and abandoned Oliver in the ditch by the side of the road. Oliver crawled in the rain and snow and got hurt. He accidentally went back to the house and fainted at the door. Mrs. Merry, the kind master, and her adopted daughter, Miss Ross, took him in and sheltered him. Coincidentally, this Miss Rose is Oliver's menstruation, but neither side knows it.
At Mrs. Merry's house, Oliver really enjoyed the warmth and beauty of life. But Fagin and his gang couldn't let Oliver go. One day, a man named monks came to Fagin. This man is Oliver's half brother. Because he was unfilial, his father gave all his inheritance to Oliver in his will. Unless Oliver and the monk are the same unfilial son, the inheritance can be inherited by the monk.
So monks paid a high price to bribe him and turned Oliver into a hopeless criminal, so as to seize all the inheritance under Oliver's name and vent his resentment against his dead father. Nancy heard monks proudly talking about how he colluded with the Bond Bulf couple and destroyed the only evidence that could prove Oliver's identity. Nancy was brave, sympathized with Oliver's experience, risked her life, secretly found Miss Ross and reported all this to her.
Just as Miss Rose was thinking about how to act, Oliver told her that he had found Mr. Brownlow. Miss Ross and Brownlow discussed how to deal with this matter. When Miss Ross met Nancy again accompanied by Brownlow, Brownlow learned that monks, the unfilial son of his late friend Edwin Leward, decided to negotiate with monks himself, but their conversation was heard by the spies sent by Fagin. Sikes killed Nancy in cold blood. Nancy's death destroyed Fagin's gang.
Fagin was arrested and hanged, while Sikes slipped and was strangled by his own rope. At the same time, monks was taken home by Brownlow, forcing him to give up everything. The truth came out that Oliver was adopted by Brownlow, ending his miserable childhood. In order to give monks a new chance, he got half of the inheritance that should have belonged to Oliver.
However, the monk did not change his bad habits, squandered his property, continued to do evil, and finally went to prison and died in prison. Bourgh, who deserves what he deserves, was deprived of all his posts and spent the rest of his life in the workhouse, where they once bullied others.