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Virginia Woolf

Mrs Dalloway (Oxford World’s Classics)

  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    What is this terror? what is this ecstasy? he thought to himself. What is it that fills me with extraordinary excitement?

    It is Clarissa, he said.

    For there she was.
  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    What does the brain matter,’ said Lady Rosseter, getting up, ‘compared with the heart?’
  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    Death was an attempt to communicate, people feeling the impossibility of reaching the centre which, mystically, evaded them; closeness drew apart; rapture faded; one was alone. There was an embrace in death.
  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    Every time she gave a party she had this feeling of being something not herself, and that everyone was unreal in one way; much more real in another.

    similarity with the great gatsby

  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    The feet of those people busy about their activities, hands putting stone to stone, minds eternally occupied not with trivial chatterings (comparing women to poplars—which was rather exciting, of course, but very silly), but with thoughts of ships, of business, of law, of administration and with it all so stately (she was in the Temple*), gay (there was the river), pious (there was the Church),* made her quite determined, whatever her mother might say, to become either a farmer or a doctor. But she was, of course, rather lazy

    fragmentation of thoughts
    the parts between brackets signify elizabeth deviating from her stream of consciousness and noticing where she is, or it could also be metafiction where virginia is acknowledging that this is a character and we as readers are here, knowledgeably reading, to get the full picture of what is going internally and externally in te instances

  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    she felt quite continuously a sense of their existence; and she felt what a waste; and she felt what a pity; and she felt if only they could be brought together; so she did it. And it was an offering; to combine, to create; but to whom?

    An offering for the sake of offering, perhaps. Anyhow, it was her gift.
  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    Nevertheless her inquiry, ‘How’s Clarissa?’ was known by women infallibly to be a signal from a well-wisher, from an almost silent companion, whose utterances (half a dozen perhaps in the course of a lifetime) signified recognition of some feminine comradeship which went beneath masculine lunch parties and united Lady Bruton and Mrs Dalloway, who seldom met, and appeared when they did meet indifferent and even hostile, in a singular bond.

    social norms

  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    . They lacked a sense of proportion. And perhaps, after all, there is no God? He shrugged his shoulders. In short, this living or not living is an affair of our own? But there they were mistaken.

    existentialism? absurdism?

  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    But Conversion, fastidious Goddess, loves blood better than brick, and feasts most subtly on the human will
  • Lunahas quoted3 months ago
    But Proportion has a sister, less smiling, more formidable, a Goddess even now engaged—in the heat and sands of India, the mud and swamp of Africa, the purlieus of London, wherever, in short, the climate or the devil tempts men to fall from the true belief which is her own—is even now engaged in dashing down shrines, smashing idols, and setting up in their place her own stern countenance. Conversion is her name and she feasts on the wills of the weakly, loving to impress, to impose, adoring her own features stamped on the face of the populace.
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