Answer:
While Winston thinks about O’Brien, to whom he has never spoken at this point, he remembers a dream he had where O’Brien told him they would meet “in the place where there is no darkness.” When Winston first observes O’Brien, he believes that, like him, O’Brien is not a loyal Party member as he pretends to be. He seems to view the place where there is no darkness with a sense of hope early in the novel, leading Winston to believe that one day he would live in a world where he would be free to think and behave as he pleases.
A Bildungsroman narrative<span> deals with the formative years of the main character - or more specifically, his or her psychological development and moral education.
</span><span>The defining characteristic would be that the main character has to experience some form of moral development. The focus of the narrative is the character's growth.</span>
<span>Not all occupational names were given literally. For example, Farmer did not mean he worked on a farm with crops, it actually meant he was a tax collector. Also, the name Banker meant "dweller on a hillside" instead of what you probably thought it meant.</span>
1. miracle play: A miracle of St. Nicholas secures the conversion of the Mussulmans
2. mystery play: An incident from the life of Henry VIII reveals the darker side of the king
3. tragedy:Oedipus discovers that he is the criminal he was searching all along
4. comedy: After a difficult courtship, Kate and Petruccio happily settle down
5. morality play: Everyman learns the importance of good works
6. history: Adam and Eve are expelled from Paradise