Th e phrase “to be noticed” in line 7 implies that the mercers are
 (A) solicitous
 (B) offi cious
 (C) cloying
 (D) vigilant
 (E) obsequious
 Passage 1. Frances Burney, Evelina
 We are to go this evening to a private ball, given by Mrs. Stanley, a very fashionable
 lady of Mrs. Mirvan’s acquaintance.
 We have been a-shopping as Mrs. Mirvan calls it, all this morning, to buy silks,
 caps, gauzes, and so forth.
 Th e shops are really very entertaining, especially the mercers; there seem to be
 six or seven men belonging to each shop; and every one took care by bowing and
 smirking, to be noticed. We were conducted from one to another, and carried from
 room to room with so much ceremony, that I was almost afraid to go on.
 I thought I should never have chosen a silk: for they produced so many, I knew
 not which to fi x upon; and they recommended them all so strongly, that I fancy
 they thought I only wanted persuasion to buy every thing they showed me. And,
 indeed, they took so much trouble, that I was almost ashamed I could not.
 At the milliners, the ladies we met were so much dressed, that I should rather
 have imagined they were making visits than purchases. But what most diverted me
 was, that we were more frequently served by men than by women; and such men!
 so fi nical, so aff ected! they seemed to understand every part of a woman’s dress better
 than we do ourselves; and they recommended caps and ribbands with an air of
 so much importance, that I wished to ask them how long they had left off wearing
 them.
 Th e dispatch with which they work in these great shops is amazing, for they
 have promised me a complete suit of linen against the evening.
 I have just had my hair dressed. You can’t think how oddly my head feels; full
 of powder and black pins, and a great cushion on the top of it. I believe you would
 hardly know me, for my face looks quite diff erent to what it did before my hair was
 dressed. When I shall be able to make use of a comb for myself I cannot tell; for my
 hair is so much entangled, frizzled they call it, that I fear it will be very diffi cult.
 I am half afraid of this ball to-night; for, you know, I have never danced but at
 school: however, Miss Mirvan says there is nothing in it. Yet, I wish it was over.
 Adieu, my dear Sir, pray excuse the wretched stuff I write; perhaps I may
 improve by being in this town, and then my letters will be less unworthy your reading.
 Meantime, I am, Your dutiful and aff ectionate, though unpolished, EVELINA