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what did Oliver find when the doctor took him to look for brownlow's house? Describe Oliver 's feelings on discovery​

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Answered by janviinole06
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Answered by alijavad7013
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This section of the novel represents the first prolonged period of real happiness that Oliver ever enjoys. The reader is not at all surprised to see that Oliver flourishes in this setting, finally gaining his health and happiness and losing none of his virtues. In Rose, we see one of the few adults who truly is willing to listen to Oliver, and judge him by his whole life and self, not just by his actions. Even if he has fallen into a life of crime, she believes, it must only be because of the hard upbringing he has hadâan idea ignored by almost every other adult character in the novel.

Roseâs complete trust of Oliver reflects two other themes introduced earlier in the novel. It is based almost solely on his face, his size, and something indescribable about him. Thus, again, a personâs physical countenance is shown to reflect his/her character, and while Mr. Losberne warns against such assumptions, it is Rose who is correct in this case. Similarly, although the characters and the reader are unaware of it at this point, Rose and Oliver are related, and thus their immediate taking to each other reflects the underlying importance of familial relationships.

Oliver's happiness in this section coincides with his first visit to the countryside. Although he was temporarily happy with Mr. Brownlow in London, the scenes there were not painted with the same idealism as the country scenes in this section. Here Oliver picks flowers every day, goes to a rustic but honest church every Sunday, gets tutored, and goes on long, pleasurable and educational walks with Rose and Mrs. Maylie. The descriptions of the setting are always positive, and present an idealized version of the country, far from the squalor and corruption of London.

The happiness in the country is not totally complete, however. Oliver regrets not being able to show Mr. Brownlow and Mrs. Bedwin his gratitude, and Rose falls gravely ill. Both of these dilemmas will be solved later in the novel, but their existence here serves to remind the reader that bad things can and do happen to good people, and everything does not always get wrapped up perfectly (although, in this novel, it will up coming pretty close).

Also in this section, Dickens' tendency to withhold information from the reader is emphasized via the figure of Monks. Monks has appeared in moments throughout the novel so far, but often unnamed or by alias. In the country, we see him run into Oliver for the first time, and while the reader is aware of this being significant, and thus is more informed than Oliver, the reader still does not understand the root of the significance. The readerâs and Oliverâs ignorance, represented in the figure of Monks, will continue almost until the end of the novel and the final reveal.

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