PART ONE: CHAPTER TWENTY - THREE - Aunt March Settles the Question Quiz — Little Women
by Louisa May Alcott
Comprehension Quiz: PART ONE: CHAPTER TWENTY - THREE - Aunt March Settles the Question
What speech has Meg prepared in case Mr. Brooke proposes?
- A polite refusal saying she agrees with Father that she is too young for an engagement
- An enthusiastic acceptance praising his character and willingness to work hard
- A request that he speak with her parents first before she can give any answer
- A suggestion that they wait three years and revisit the question when she is older
What does Mr. Brooke claim is the reason for his visit to the March home?
- He came to retrieve his umbrella and to check on Mr. March's health
- He came to deliver a message from Mr. Laurence about a tutoring schedule
- He came to return a book he had borrowed from the family library
- He came to discuss with Mrs. March his plans for future employment
What causes Meg to suddenly turn cold and dismiss Mr. Brooke after he confesses his love?
- She remembers Annie Moffat's lessons in coquetry and is nettled by his confident smile
- She hears Aunt March arriving at the front door and panics about being caught
- She realizes she truly does not love him and feels guilty about leading him on
- She sees Jo watching through the parlor door and feels embarrassed by her sister
What threat does Aunt March make when she discovers Meg's courtship?
- She threatens to disinherit Meg entirely if she marries a poor man like Brooke
- She threatens to tell Mr. March that Meg has been meeting Brooke in secret
- She threatens to send Meg away to live with relatives in another city
- She threatens to withdraw her financial support for Beth's medical treatment
Why does Aunt March's opposition have the opposite of its intended effect on Meg?
- Aunt March excels at rousing the spirit of opposition, and being forbidden to love Brooke makes Meg determined to do so
- Meg is moved to pity for Brooke when she sees how Aunt March's words hurt him
- Aunt March accidentally reveals that Brooke has already received Mr. March's blessing
- Meg realizes that Aunt March's fortune is not as large as she had always believed
How does Mr. Brooke learn about Meg's true feelings?
- He overhears Meg passionately defending him to Aunt March from the study
- Jo tells him what Meg said while the two of them are alone in the hallway
- Meg writes him a letter confessing her feelings after Aunt March leaves
- Mrs. March calls him back to the parlor and tells him Meg has accepted
What does Laurie do when he sees Meg at the window earlier in the chapter?
- He falls on one knee in the snow and performs a melodramatic pantomime of a rejected lover
- He waves cheerfully and holds up a bouquet of flowers as a congratulatory gift
- He pretends to read a love letter aloud and clutches it to his heart dramatically
- He tips his hat formally and bows with an exaggerated display of courtly manners
Which of these events actually happened in this chapter?
In the chapter, Alcott writes that Meg "followed a capricious impulse." What does "capricious" mean?
- Given to sudden, unpredictable changes of mood or behavior
- Carefully planned and executed with deliberate intention
- Deeply romantic and driven by passionate emotion
- Cautious and hesitant, marked by fearful uncertainty
The narrator says Aunt March drove off "in high dudgeon." What does "dudgeon" mean?
- A feeling of deep offense or indignant resentment
- A state of extreme physical exhaustion and weariness
- A mood of quiet sadness and reflective melancholy
- A condition of nervous anxiety and agitated worry
Alcott notes that Annie Moffat's lessons in "coquetry" influenced Meg. What is coquetry?
- Flirtatious behavior designed to attract admiration without serious commitment
- The social art of making polite and graceful conversation at formal events
- A strategy of pretending indifference to gain a negotiating advantage
- The practice of dressing elaborately to impress others at social gatherings
Comprehension Quiz
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