ignorant

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Peter Jiong

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She was educated as best could be, in half-a-dozen countries, and it’s a marvel to me that she is not entirely ignorant or entirely vicious. She’s a brilliant example in favour of the opinion that the human race is inclined to good rather than to evil.

From
Mrs. Craddock by W Somerset Maugham (1902)

Does "ignorant" mean the opposite of "vicious"?

If "she was educated as best could be", why is it a marvel to the speaker that "she is not entirely ignorant"?
 
Because her education took place in half a dozen different places.
 
“not educated”
 
How does that suggest the human race is inclined to good rather than to evil?
 
She was educated as best could be, in half-a-dozen countries, and it’s a marvel to me that she is not entirely ignorant or entirely vicious.

What does this sentence imply?
 
She was educated as best could be, in half-a-dozen countries, and it’s a marvel to me that she is not entirely ignorant or entirely vicious.

What does this sentence imply?
To me, its main significance is that the writer hadn't yet learned to write comprehensibly. Why do you keep reading this book? Maugham did eventually produce some excellent work that would be well worth studying.
 
Studying in different countries is supposed to make one ignorant and vicious?
 
Having a disjointed education with no continuity can be a problem. I am sure that is the point.

As for being vicious, I think that is a class attitude that the uneducated must be violent and crude.
 
Studying in different countries is supposed to make one ignorant and vicious?
No.

First sentence: It's amazing that although her formal education was not traditional, she is well-informed and well-mannered.

Second sentence: This proves that you don't need a fancy education to become a good person.
 
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