'O my death mother! I am miserable, truly miserable! But yet, don't be frightened, I am honest! God, of his goodness, keep me so!' These lines characterize Samuel Richardson's Pamela in all of the following ways EXCEPT:

🎲 Try a Random Question  |  Total Questions in Quiz: 100  |  🧠 Study this quiz with Flashcards
This question is part of a full practice quiz:
ENGL203 Final Exam - Cultural and Literary Expression in the 18th and 19th Centuries — practice the complete quiz, review flashcards, or try a random question.

MCQs on formative cultural and literary developments chronologically, dividing the course into four roughly sequential periods: The Enlightenment and Restoration Literature; The Rise of the Novel; Romanticism; and the Victorian Period.
 


'O my death mother! I am miserable, truly miserable! But yet, don't be frightened, I am honest! God, of his goodness, keep me so!' These lines characterize Samuel Richardson's Pamela in all of the following ways EXCEPT:





ADVERTISEMENT