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Evelina, Or, the History of a Young Lady's Entrance into the World - When Past Mistakes Return to Haunt

Fanny Burney

Evelina, Or, the History of a Young Lady's Entrance into the World

When Past Mistakes Return to Haunt

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Summary

When Past Mistakes Return to Haunt

Evelina, Or, the History of a Young Lady's Entrance into the World by Fanny Burney

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Evelina's peaceful time at Bristol Hotwells is shattered when she encounters Lord Merton, the libertine nobleman who had harassed her at the Pantheon. He doesn't initially recognize her but becomes increasingly forward and inappropriate, asking intrusive questions about her living situation and activities. Mrs. Selwyn masterfully deflects his advances with sharp wit, making cutting remarks about his character and future prospects that sail right over his head. The encounter reveals Merton's true nature—he's crude, dismissive of older women, and treats Evelina like a conquest rather than a person. Later, the apothecary Mr. Ridgeway provides crucial backstory: Lord Merton is a notorious gambler and womanizer who has squandered half his inheritance. More shocking still, he's engaged to Lady Louisa Larpent—Lord Orville's sister. This news devastates Evelina, who learns that Lord Orville himself will soon arrive in Bristol with his sister. The chapter captures the anxiety of dreading an inevitable confrontation with someone who has hurt you. Evelina fears facing Lord Orville after his insulting letter, worrying he'll misinterpret her behavior and that she won't be able to hide her conflicted feelings. The revelation that Orville's sister would marry such a dissolute man forces Evelina to question everything she believed about virtue and family influence.

Coming Up in Chapter 63

The dreaded moment arrives as Lord Orville comes to Bristol. Will Evelina be able to maintain her composure when they meet face to face, or will her emotions betray her true feelings about his cruel letter?

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Original text
complete·1,954 words
L

ETTER LXII.

EVELINA TO THE REV. MR. VILLARS. Bristol Hotwells, Sept. 12th.

THE first fortnight that I passed here was so quiet, so serene, that it gave me reason to expect a settled calm during my stay; but if I may now judge of the time to come, by the present state of my mind, the calm will be succeeded by a storm, of which I dread the violence!

This morning, in my way to the pump-room with Mrs. Selwyn, we were both very much incommoded by three gentlemen, who were sauntering by the side of the Avon, laughing and talking very loud, and lounging so disagreeably, that we knew not how to pass them. They all three fixed their eyes very boldly upon me, alternately looking under my hat, and whispering one another. Mrs. Selwyn assumed an air of uncommon sternness, and said, "You will please, gentlemen, either to proceed yourselves, or to suffer us."

"Oh! Ma'am," cried one of them, "we will suffer you with the greatest pleasure in life."

1 / 12

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Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Reading Character Through Associates

This chapter teaches how to evaluate someone's true nature by observing who they choose to associate with and defend.

Practice This Today

This week, notice when someone you respect defends or dates someone who treats others poorly - it reveals their actual values, not their stated ones.

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"id, "You will please, gentlemen, either to proceed yourselves, or to suffer us." "Oh!"

— Mrs. Selwyn

Context: When the three men are blocking their path and staring at Evelina

Mrs. Selwyn uses formal, commanding language to assert authority over men who are being deliberately intimidating. Her tone shows she won't be bullied and expects immediate compliance.

In Today's Words:

Either move along or get out of our way.

"y; for I should be sorry to give my servant the trouble of teaching you better manners." Her co"

— Mrs. Selwyn

Context: Threatening to have her servant physically remove the harassing men

A brilliant power move that threatens violence while maintaining her dignity. She implies these 'gentlemen' aren't worth her personal attention and would need to be handled like common troublemakers.

In Today's Words:

I'd hate to have security throw you out, but I will.

"the calm will be succeeded by a storm, of which I dread the violence!"

— Evelina

Context: Opening the letter, predicting that her peaceful time is about to end

Evelina's metaphor shows her growing awareness that conflict is inevitable. She's learning that in her social world, periods of peace are temporary and storms always follow.

In Today's Words:

Things are about to get really messy, and I'm scared of how bad it's going to be.

Thematic Threads

Reputation

In This Chapter

Lord Merton's true character as a gambler and womanizer becomes known through gossip, while Evelina fears how Lord Orville will judge her behavior

Development

Evolved from earlier concerns about social standing to deeper questions about how character is revealed and judged

In Your Life:

Your reputation at work or in your community can be shaped by information that travels faster than your ability to control it

Class

In This Chapter

Mrs. Selwyn's sharp wit protects Evelina from Lord Merton's advances, showing how social skills can be weapons against inappropriate behavior

Development

Builds on earlier themes by showing how wit and intelligence can level social playing fields

In Your Life:

Quick thinking and verbal skills can protect you from people who try to use their position to make you uncomfortable

Deception

In This Chapter

Lord Merton presents himself as a gentleman while being crude and predatory, and his engagement to Lady Louisa hides his dissolute nature

Development

Continues the pattern of people not being what they seem, now extended to family connections

In Your Life:

People can maintain respectable relationships or positions while behaving badly in private

Anxiety

In This Chapter

Evelina's dread about facing Lord Orville consumes her thoughts and affects her ability to enjoy her peaceful time in Bristol

Development

Shows how anticipatory anxiety can be more destructive than the actual feared event

In Your Life:

Worrying about difficult conversations or confrontations often causes more suffering than the actual encounter

Protection

In This Chapter

Mrs. Selwyn acts as Evelina's shield against Lord Merton's inappropriate advances through clever verbal deflection

Development

Demonstrates how allies can provide protection through intelligence rather than just authority

In Your Life:

Having someone who can speak up for you or deflect unwanted attention is invaluable in uncomfortable social situations

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You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    What does Lord Merton's behavior toward Evelina reveal about how he views women, and how does Mrs. Selwyn handle his advances?

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why is Evelina so devastated to learn that Lord Orville's sister is engaged to Lord Merton, and what does this force her to question about virtue and family influence?

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where do you see the pattern of 'inevitable confrontation' playing out in modern workplaces, relationships, or family situations?

    application • medium
  4. 4

    When you know a difficult conversation or encounter is coming, what strategies could help you take control of the timing and circumstances rather than letting dread build?

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does Evelina's anxiety about facing Lord Orville teach us about how avoidance can actually increase the likelihood of what we're trying to avoid?

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Map Your Avoidance Patterns

Think of a difficult conversation or confrontation you've been avoiding. Write down what you're afraid will happen, then identify three specific steps you could take to handle it on your terms rather than letting anxiety control the situation. Consider how the anticipation might be worse than the actual encounter.

Consider:

  • •Notice how much mental energy you're spending on avoiding versus addressing the situation
  • •Think about whether delaying is actually making the problem bigger or more complicated
  • •Consider what you would tell a friend in the same situation

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you finally faced something you'd been dreading. How did the reality compare to your fears, and what did you learn about the cost of avoidance?

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Coming Up Next...

Chapter 63: Lord Orville Redeemed

The dreaded moment arrives as Lord Orville comes to Bristol. Will Evelina be able to maintain her composure when they meet face to face, or will her emotions betray her true feelings about his cruel letter?

Continue to Chapter 63
Previous
Healing Waters and Complicated Companions
Contents
Next
Lord Orville Redeemed

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