15 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2018
  2. ebooks.adelaide.edu.au ebooks.adelaide.edu.au
    1. Let Miss Mirvan, then, Madam, shine in all the splendour of high life; but suffer my child still to enjoy the pleasures of humble retirement, with a mind to which greater views are unknown.

      Mr. Villars worries about Evelina's innocence being tarnished, and says that Miss Mirvan can indulge in that life but he wants Evelina to remain humble and not experience a life in a big city such as London.

    2. Disappointed of the fortune he expected, by the inexorable rancour of the Duvals, he infamously burnt the certificate of their marriage, and denied that they had ever been united.

      Sir John Belmont marries Miss. Evelyn but only for her fortune, but when he didn't get her fortune he left her without hesitation.

    3. to a woman low-bred and illiberal as Mrs. Evelyn

      Mr. Villars description of Madame Duval

    4. Perhaps, were it possible to effect the total extirpation of novels, our young ladies in general, and boarding-school damsels in particular, might profit from their annihilation; but since the distemper they have spread seems incurable, since their contagion bids defiance to the medicine of advice or reprehension, and since they are found to baffle all the mental art of physic, save what is prescribed by the slow regimen of Time, and bitter diet of Experience; surely all attempts to contribute to the number of those which may be read, if not with advantage, at least without injury, ought rather to be encouraged than contemned.

      The author explains that if novels ceased to exist it would benefit the young ladies, but since, instead, they are so popular no matter what others may say negatively about them, they are still being read, and in some way it should at least be encouraged instead of condemned.

    5. I yet presume not to attempt pursuing the same ground which they have tracked; whence, though they may have cleared the weeds, they have also culled the flowers; and, though they have rendered the path plain, they have left it barren.

      The author talks about how she admires such authors as Rousseau and Johnson, but their writings are not ones which she will follow, maybe because she feels they are still missing some important topics or beneficial details in their writings.

    6. For this purpose, a young female, educated in the most secluded retirement, makes, at the age of seventeen, her first appearance upon the great and busy stage of life; with a virtuous mind, a cultivated understanding, and a feeling heart, her ignorance of the forms, and inexperience in the manners of the world, occasion all the little incidents which these volumes record, and which form the natural progression of the life of a young woman of obscure birth, but conspicuous beauty, for the first six months after her Entrance into the world.

      A brief summary into what Evelina is going to be about and who this main character is, which will help in realizing why the events that are in play, occur.

    7. Let me, therefore, prepare for disappointment those who, in the perusal of these sheets, entertain the gentle expectation of being transported to the fantastic regions of Romance, where Fiction is coloured by all the gay tints of luxurious Imagination, where Reason is an outcast, and where the sublimity of the Marvellous rejects all aid from sober Probability.

      This book will not be about romance and imaginary fantasies with monsters and such, and situations that would probably never happen in the real world, but instead a more realistic story

    8. Though I have always called her by the name of Anville, and reported in this neighbourhood that her father, my intimate friend, left her to my guardianship

      Covering up her identity with a false name, so that Evelina wouldn't know the circumstances of her true identity and everything that comes with it.

    9. I cannot to you sign ANVILLE, and what other name may I claim?

      Why could she not sign to Mr. Villars as Anville?

    10. Only child of a wealthy Baronet, whose person she has never seen, whose character she has reason to abhor, and whose name she is forbidden to claim; entitled as she is to lawfully inherit his fortune and estate, is there any probability that he will properly own her? And while he continues to persevere in disavowing his marriage with Miss Evelyn, she shall never, at the expense of her mother’s honour, receive a part of her right as the donation of his bounty.

      Mr. Villars tall about Evelina's father and how she by law she is to inherit his fortune but still he would probably never claim her. And he still denies ever being married to her mother and for the sake of her mothers honor she shouldn't get a part of his fortune because its basically like a donation from her mothers killer.

    11. When young people are too rigidly sequestered from it, their lively and romantic imaginations paint it to them as a paradise of which they have been beguiled; but when they are shown it properly, and in due time, they see it such as it really is, equally shared by pain and pleasure, hope and disappointment.

      Lady Howard feels Evelina should see the world, and what its truly like, I suppose that is because she is now 17 and coming of age, where she should soon be married and such.

    12. That child, Madam, shall never, while life is lent me, know the loss she has sustained. I have cherished, succoured, and supported her, from her earliest infancy to her sixteenth year;

      this shows how much Mr. Villars truly cares for Evelina, and even tho she lost her mother from birth (someone he also cherished very much) he will never let Evelina feel that loss, and that shows his character as well.

    13. “That I would not, upon any account, intentionally offend Madame Duval; but that I have weighty, nay unanswerable reasons for detaining her grand-daughter at present in England; the principal of which is, that it was the earnest desire of one to whose will she owes implicit duty. Madame Duval may be assured, that she meets with the utmost attention and tenderness; that her education, however short of my wishes, almost exceeds my abilities; and I flatter myself, when the time arrives that she shall pay her duty to her grand-mother, Madame Duval will find no reason to be dissatisfied with what has been done for her.”

      Mr. Villars rejects Madame Duval's request to want to see her grand daughter, whom after her mothers death, has been in his care. He tells Lady Howard to assure her that her granddaughter is well taken care of. with the way Lady Howard described Madame Duval, can we really blame Mr. Villars for his decision?

    14. and to mark the manners of the times

      A claim that these letters will give an example of how the people of this time (18th century) behaved.

    15. niggard

      a stingy or ungenerous person.