the mysterious stranger was orlick
lawyer jaggars
The stranger at the pub gave Pip money and instructions to bring him food and a file the next day.
He gives pip 2 pounds
two 1 pound notes
Pip shared his coach with a convict named Magwitch, also known as Provis. Magwitch had a significant impact on Pip's life, as he turned out to be the mysterious benefactor who funded Pip's upbringing as a gentleman in Charles Dickens' novel "Great Expectations."
he wrote 'your exact weight' thus winning the bet
The pub in "Great Expectations" is called The Three Jolly Bargemen. It is a local gathering place in the novel where Pip regularly goes to meet different characters like Joe Gargery and Mr. Wopsle.
The stranger wrote "Your exact weight" on a piece of paper
The person who said that to a child is wrong, and of course one cannot put their hands on another person especially not a child, it is up to the manager of the pub to remove the adult from the pub. On the other side of the argument a pub is NO place for a child in the first place, where are the parents of this child, and if children were allowed in the pub, there must have been a booth or table where they could sit as a family.
Pub (pub) or bistrot (bistro).
The sequel to the the pub with no beer is:" the answer to the pub with no beer"
"Pub" in English is pub in Italian.
runs a pub