Answer:
In George Orwell's novel 1984, Winston meets Ampleforth and Parsons while he is waiting in the jail cell in the Ministry of Love. Ampleforth is a poet who works in the Ministry of Truth, where he rewrites old poetry to conform to the Party's ideology. He has been arrested for committing a thoughtcrime by leaving the word "God" in a poem he was rewriting, instead of replacing it with "the deity." Parsons, on the other hand, is a coworker of Winston at the Ministry of Truth and has been arrested for thoughtcrime as well. He was heard by his daughter speaking critically of the Party in his sleep and was reported to the Thought Police by her. Parsons is later portrayed as a model Party member who fully embraces the Party's ideology and even informs on his own children for thoughtcrime.