Oliver Twist : Or the Parish Boy's Progress.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Minneapolis :
Lerner Publishing Group,
2015.
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Colección: | First Avenue Classics Ser.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Title Page; Copyright Information; Table of Contents; Chapter I: Treats of the Place Where Oliver Twist Was Born and of the Circumstances Attending His Birth; Chapter II: Treats of Oliver Twist's Growth, Education, and Board; Chapter III:Relates How Oliver Twist Was Very near Getting a Place Which Would Not Have Been a Sinecure; Chapter IV: Oliver, Being Offered Another Place, Makes His First Entry into Public Life; Chapter V: Oliver Mingles with New Associates. Going to a Funeral for the First Time He Forms an Unfavourable Notion of His Master's Business.
- Chapter VI: Oliver, Being Goaded by the Taunts of Noah, Rouses into Action, and Rather Astonishes HimChapter VII: Oliver Continues Refractory; Chapter VIII: Oliver Walks to London. He Encounters on the Rooad a Strange Sort of Young Gentleman; Chapter IX: Containing Further Particulars Concerning the Pleasant Old Gentleman, and His Hopeful Pupils; Chapter X: Oliver Becomes Better Acquainted with the Characters of His New Associates; and Purchases Experience at a High Price. Being a Short, but Very Important Chapter, in This History; Chapter XI: Treats of Mr. Fang the Police Magistrate.
- And Furnishes a Slight Specimen of His Mode of Administering JusticeChapter XII: In Which Oliver Is Taken Better Care of Than He Ever Was Before. And in Which the Narrative Reverts to the Merry Old Gentleman and His Youthful Friends; Chapter XIII: Some New Acquaintances Are Introduced to the Intelligent Reader, Connected with Whom Various Pleasant Matters Are Related, Appertaining to This History; Chapter XIV: Comprising Further Particulars of Oliver's Stay at Mr. Brownlow's, with the Remarkable Prediction Which One Mr. Grimwig Uttered Concerning Him, When He Went Out on an Errand.
- Chapter XV: Showing How Very Fond of Oliver Twist, the Merry Old Jew and Miss Nancy WereChapter XVI: Relates What Became of Oliver Twist, after He Had Been Claimed by Nancy; Chapter XVII Oliver's Destiny Continuing Unpropitious, Brings a Great Man to London to Injure His Reputation; Chapter XVIII: How Oliver Passed His Time in the Improving Society of His Reputable Friends; Chapter XIX: In Which a Notable Plan Is Discussed and Determined On; Chapter XX: Wherein Oliver Is Delivered over to Mr. William Sikes; Chapter XXI: The Expedition; Chapter XXII: The Burglary.
- Chapter XXIII: Which Contains the Substance of a Pleasant Conversation between Mr. Bumble and a Lady and Shows That Even a Beadle May Be Susceptible on Some Points; Chapter XXIV: Treats on a Very Poor Subject. But Is a Short One, and May Be Found of Importance in This History; Chapter XXV: Wherein This History Reverts to Mr. Fagin and Company; Chapter XXVI: In Which a Mysterious Character Appears upon the Scene; and Many Things, Inseparable from This History, Are Done and Performed; Chapter XXVII: Atones for the Unpoliteness of a Former Chapter; Which Deserted a Lady, Most Unceremoniously.