
Estimated Reading Time: 16 min
Amelia MCQs
1. What influences the calamities of fools, according to the narrator’s suspicion?
A. Natural means
B. Blind guidance
C. Utmost malice
D. Predominant passion
2. Where were the apprehended persons brought before Justice Thrasher?
A. Westminster Liberty
B. Certain parish
C. London Court
D. Thrasher’s bar
3. What critical knowledge did Justice Thrasher primarily lack for his office?
A. Law of nature
B. Reading and writing
C. Knowledge of law
D. Common sense
4. What is the prison entrance fee demanded from new prisoners called?
A. Customary tribute
B. Garnish payment
C. Drinking money
D. Prisoner’s purse
5. Why did Booth refuse to pay the customary fee upon arrival at the prison?
A. Opposed the custom
B. Had no money
C. Thought it was robbery
D. Needed advice
6. What physical characteristic described the woman nicknamed Blear-eyed Moll?
A. Scarce discernible eye
B. Crooked nose
C. One eye, yellow-white
D. Preposterously short chin
7. Who physically intervened to stop Blear-eyed Moll from insulting Mr. Booth?
A. The prison keeper
B. Tall male prisoner
C. Mr. Robinson
D. The constable Gotobed
8. What specific crime was the pòor young woman with the old man committed for?
A. Stealing food
B. Felony theft
C. Receiving stolen goods
D. Supporting her father
9. What serious crime was the well-dressed man, who expected bail, charged with?
A. Grand larceny
B. Horrid perjury
C. Civil fraud
D. Assault and battery
10. How long had it been since Booth and Miss Matthews last met before their prison encounter?
A. One long year
B. Eight or nine years
C. Seven years exactly
D. Several months
11. Who sent Booth the guinea he found carefully wrapped in paper after his confinement began?
A. Colonel James
B. Miss Matthews
C. Dr Harrison
D. Mr. Robinson
12. What spontaneous reaction burst from Booth’s lips upon hearing Miss Matthews’ passionate story?
A. What do you hear
B. Good heavens, what
C. You are a fury
D. My astonishment ceases
13. What assembly incident did Miss Matthews recall to Booth before relating her history?
A. Duel over honour
B. A country dance
C. Standing uppermost contest
D. Quarrel with Miss Johnson
14. What was the name of the dragoon cornet who seduced and betrayed Miss Matthews?
A. Williams
B. Thrasher
C. Hebbers
D. Gotobed
15. What accomplishment primarily recommended Cornet Hebbers to Miss Matthews’s father?
A. French language skills
B. Dancing ability
C. Skill in music
D. Handsome person
16. Whom did Hebbers secretly marry, leading to Miss Matthews’s immediate ruin?
A. Miss Johnson
B. Mrs. Carey
C. Miss Fanny
D. Mrs. Harris
17. Who insisted that Miss Matthews’s murder case could result in only “manslaughter and cold iron”?
A. The keeper
B. Mr. Murphy
C. Mr. Robinson
D. The first turnkey
18. What aspect of Miss Matthews’s actions did her lawyer Murphy identify as implying “malice prepense”?
A. Lying to the police
B. Carrying a penknife drawn
C. Running away
D. Lack of money
19. What accident deprived Amelia of the admiration of others and beat her nose to pieces?
A. Fall from a horse
B. Loss of fortune
C. Chaise overturning
D. Smallpox affliction
20. What did Booth admire most about Amelia after her physical injury?
A. Her resignation
B. Her beautiful covering
C. Her lovely nose
D. Her mind and character
21. Who was the female whom Amelia stated she hated and despised?
A. Miss Matthews
B. Mrs. Harris
C. Miss Osborne
D. Miss Betty
22. What was Booth’s sole financial resource when courting Amelia?
A. His small inheritance
B. An ensign’s commission
C. Dr Harrison’s charity
D. Half pay only
23. How did Amelia’s mother (Mrs Harris) manage to discover Booth’s private interview with Amelia?
A. Found Amelia fainting
B. Overheard the talk
C. Miss Betty reported it
D. Saw them embracing
24. What affliction seized Booth’s sister Nancy, leading to her death?
A. Consumption illness
B. Light-head fits
C. Unmerciful distemper
D. Agonies of pain
25. Who was Mrs Harris’s ‘usual privy counsellor’ in all her domestic affairs?
A. Colonel James
B. Mr. Booth
C. Dr Harrison
D. Miss Betty
26. How was Booth successfully smuggled into Amelia’s mother’s house?
A. As a deliveryman
B. In a wine hamper
C. By using a coach
D. Via a garden wall
27. What “ridiculous distress” related to their imminent wedding did Booth find humorous?
A. Lack of funds
B. No pen, ink, paper
C. Wet clothing
D. Mrs Harris arriving
28. Who secured the marriage licence and confronted Mrs Harris, bringing about the wedding?
A. Mrs Harris’s lawyer
B. Mr. Murphy
C. Miss Betty
D. Dr Harrison
29. According to Dr Harrison, what supreme obligation required Booth to go on the military expedition?
A. Love for Amelia
B. Regard for character
C. Duty to country
D. Honour as a soldier
30. What realisation ultimately reconciled Amelia to Booth’s necessary departure for the expedition?
A. She hated Miss Betty
B. Her impending childbirth
C. Her mother’s anger
D. The doctor’s advice
31. What was the name of the ship on which Booth experienced a violent sea storm?
A. Lovely Peggy
B. The Seahawk
C. The Gibraltar
D. Harris’s Hope
32. What danger did the ship captain most fear during the severe storm near Scilly?
A. Leak in the hull
B. Running out of food
C. Rocks of Scilly
D. Being shipwrecked
33. What injury did Booth sustain during the sally party at Gibraltar?
A. Musket-ball in chest
B. Broken left leg
C. Head wound
D. Knife wound
34. Who carried Booth off his shoulders and saved him after he was wounded at Gibraltar?
A. Captain James
B. His faithful servant
C. Atkinson’s comrade
D. A kind officer
35. How did Amelia first learn of Booth’s injury while he was stationed abroad?
A. Letter from James
B. Officer reported it
C. Unknown hand letter
D. Dr Harrison informed her
36. Who advised Amelia to verify the report of Booth’s illness, contradicting Booth’s own letter?
A. Miss Matthews
B. Captain James
C. Miss Betty
D. Her foster-brother
37. What disorder did Booth’s wife contract due to her excessive care and fatigue from nursing him?
A. Nervous fever
B. Vapours or hysterics
C. Consumption habit
D. Childbirth agonies
38. Miss Betty (E. Harris) warned Amelia that the vapours had become ill what item?
A. Low circumstances
B. A knapsack
C. The army life
D. A young officer
39. What relation did Major Bath bring to Montpelier at his own expense for her health?
A. His mother
B. His pòor sister
C. His wife
D. His nephew
40. What was Major Bath doing when Booth unexpectedly found him in his sister’s room?
A. Reading poetry
B. Warming her posset
C. Arguing with her nurse
D. Fixing the fire
41. What excuse did the narrator provide for Booth’s infidelity with Miss Matthews in prison?
A. Amelia was cold
B. Fortune ensnared him
C. He was forced
D. She loved him first
42. What painful internal feeling consistently followed Booth’s transgressions with Miss Matthews?
A. Shame
B. Confusion
C. Repentance
D. Self-loathing
43. What false rumour did Amelia’s sister (Miss Betty) maliciously spread about Booth’s confinement?
A. He lacked money
B. He was confined
C. Committed for murder
D. Deserted the army
44. What generous financial help did Colonel James first offer Booth upon hearing of his distress?
A. Bank-bill for twenty
B. Fifty pieces
C. Give him thirty more
D. Pay all debts
45. Colonel James told Booth his anger regarding Miss Matthews was lessened because of what realization?
A. Booth’s apology
B. Miss Matthews’ beauty
C. James’s own folly
D. Fear of Bath
46. What generous action did the noble lord take upon first hearing of Mrs Bennet’s distress?
A. Sent a remittance
B. Settled an annuity
C. Brought her home
D. Paid her husband’s debts
47. Who did Serjeant Atkinson secretly marry, surprising both Amelia and Booth?
A. Miss Matthews
B. Mrs. Bennet
C. Miss Betty
D. Mrs. Ellison
48. Why did Colonel Bath finally apologise and reconcile with Booth after the misunderstanding?
A. He won the duel
B. Learned Booth would fight
C. Convinced Booth was no rascal
D. Brother James intervened
49. What tactic did Captain Trent suggest Booth use to profit from the noble lord’s attention to Amelia?
A. Let Amelia be friendly
B. Demand payment
C. Sell her jewellery
D. Confront James
50. Where did Miss Harris flee after Amelia warned her about the discovery of her villainy?
A. Montpelier
B. France via Poole
C. West Indies
D. London hiding
Brief Overview
Amelia is a sentimental novel by Henry Fielding, first published in December 1751. The novel features many allusions to classical literature. It primarily focuses on the theme of marriage and the quiet resilience of feminine intelligence.
The novel follows Captain Booth and his wife, Amelia, who are a worthy couple facing numerous serious troubles after their marriage. Booth’s recklessness often causes problems; he is frequently arrested and sent to prison for fighting or for unpaid debts.
While Booth is in jail, he meets Miss Matthews, who is imprisoned on a charge of murder. Booth is temporarily unfaithful to Amelia with Miss Matthews, highlighting his moral weaknesses.
Amelia is portrayed as excellent and kind-hearted. She bravely handles their deep poverty and distress with strength. A man named Colonel James pretends to be Booth’s friend but actively tries to seduce Amelia. A rich and powerful lord also tries to win her affection.
Amelia is saved from great danger by her friend, Mrs Bennet, who later marries Booth’s loyal foster-brother, Sergeant Atkinson. A kind clergyman, Dr Harrison, helps Booth many times, often paying his debts. Dr Harrison finally discovers a forgery that had kept Amelia from her rightful family inheritance.