I love my grandmother very much (or I call it Nana), and I know her better than anyone else. She is smart, kind, fun, sociable and very outgoing. I remember being in the mall when she stepped into the "escalator". To find out what went wrong, she just continued to curse it. As you can imagine, my speech is about Nana, my biggest example. Pamela Haist was born in Cambridgeshire, England on March 19, 1924.
Samuel Richardson's letter novel Pamela, or sometimes the first British novel, Virtue Rewards (1740), fights against her employer B, hundreds of pages of hired servant Pamela It is a sexual harassment story. Unnecessary progress B. The quarantine was imprisoned, repeatedly attacked Pamela, she wrote a diary after she wrote her story to parents' house until Mr. B intercepted them. Mr. B suggested that it eventually worn out by her immortal virtue and lucky Pamela won the prize. Humble maid married a wealthy landowner, and the two lived happily ever after.
The book began with a 15 year old maid, Pamela. And she wrote a letter to her parents for a mourning disappearance of her woman and her employer. In addition to feeling sad about B's death, Pamela is afraid of losing his position at home. From a poor family, Pamela is very keen to keep money running. Furthermore, this is a fairly simple task. Fortunately, Mr. B, her son, her woman suggested that she and other servants continue. Wow! Pamela is very excited, but when B is about to start becoming a bit more friendly, try him as soon as he knows what we mean. (We have still written letters, in fact, the whole novel is actually written in a letter.)