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Shoumi Dasgupta > Shoumi's Quotes

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  • #1
    Virginia Woolf
    “She looked now at the drawing-room step. She saw, through William鈥檚 eyes, the shape of a woman, peaceful and silent, with downcast eyes. She sat musing, pondering (she was in grey that day, Lily thought). Her eyes were bent. She would never lift them. . . . [N]o, she thought, one could say nothing to nobody. The urgency of the moment always missed its mark. Words fluttered sideways and struck the object inches too low. Then one gave it up; then the idea sunk back again; then one became like most middle-aged people, cautious, furtive, with wrinkles between the eyes and a look of perpetual apprehension. For how could one express in words these emotions of the body? Express that emptiness there? (She was looking at the drawing-room steps; they looked extraordinarily empty.) It was one鈥檚 body feeling, not one鈥檚 mind. The physical sensations that went with the bare look of the steps had become suddenly extremely unpleasant. To want and not to have, sent all up her body a hardness, a hollowness, a strain. And then to want and not to have 鈥 to want and want 鈥 how that wrung the heart, and wrung again and again! Oh, Mrs. Ramsay! she called out silently, to that essence which sat by the boat, that abstract one made of her, that woman in grey, as if to abuse her for having gone, and then having gone, come back again. It had seemed so safe, thinking of her. Ghost, air, nothingness, a thing you could play with easily and safely at any time of day or night, she had been that, and then suddenly she put her hand out and wrung the heart thus. Suddenly, the empty drawing-room steps, the frill of the chair inside, the puppy tumbling on the terrace, the whole wave and whisper of the garden became like curves and arabesques flourishing round a centre of complete emptiness. . . . A curious notion came to her that he did after all hear the things she could not say. . . . She looked at her picture. That would have been his answer, presumably 鈥 how 鈥測ou鈥 and 鈥淚鈥 and 鈥渟he鈥 pass and vanish; nothing stays; all changes; but not words, not paint. Yet it would be hung in the attics, she thought; it would be rolled up and flung under a sofa; yet even so, even of a picture like that, it was true. One might say, even of this scrawl, not of that actual picture, perhaps, but of what it attempted, that it 鈥渞emained for ever,鈥 she was going to say, or, for the words spoken sounded even to herself, too boastful, to hint, wordlessly; when, looking at the picture, she was surprised to find that she could not see it. Her eyes were full of a hot liquid (she did not think of tears at first) which, without disturbing the firmness of her lips, made the air thick, rolled down her cheeks. She had perfect control of herself 鈥 Oh, yes! 鈥 in every other way. Was she crying then for Mrs. Ramsay, without being aware of any unhappiness? She addressed old Mr. Carmichael again. What was it then? What did it mean? Could things thrust their hands up and grip one; could the blade cut; the fist grasp? Was there no safety? No learning by heart of the ways of the world? No guide, no shelter, but all was miracle, and leaping from the pinnacle of a tower into the air? Could it be, even for elderly people, that this was life? 鈥 startling, unexpected, unknown? For one moment she felt that if they both got up, here, now on the lawn, and demanded an explanation, why was it so short, why was it so inexplicable, said it with violence, as two fully equipped human beings from whom nothing should be hid might speak, then, beauty would roll itself up; the space would fill; those empty flourishes would form into shape; if they shouted loud enough Mrs. Ramsay would return. 鈥淢rs. Ramsay!鈥 she said aloud, 鈥淢rs. Ramsay!鈥 The tears ran down her face.”
    Virginia Woolf

  • #2
    Virginia Woolf
    “What dissolution of the soul you demanded in order to get through one day, what lies, bowings, scrapings, fluency and servility! How you chained me to one spot, one hour, one chair, and sat yourselves down opposite! How you snatched from me the white spaces that lie between hour and hour and rolled them into dirty pellets and tossed them into the waste-paper basket with your greasy paws. Yet those were my life.”
    Virginia Woolf, The Waves

  • #3
    Virginia Woolf
    “It was a miserable machine, an inefficient machine, she thought, the human apparatus for painting or for feeling; it always broke down at the critical moment; heroically, one must force it on.”
    Virginia Woolf

  • #4
    Virginia Woolf
    “With my cheek leant upon the window pane I like to fancy that I am pressing as closely as can be upon the massy wall of time, which is forever lifting and pulling and letting fresh spaces of life in upon us. May it be mine to taste the moment before it has spread itself over the rest of the world! Let me taste the newest and the freshest.”
    Virginia Woolf

  • #5
    Virginia Woolf
    “...the problem of space remained, she thought, taking up her brush again. It glared at her. The whole mass of the picture was poised upon that weight. Beautiful and bright it should be on the surface, feathery and evanescent, one colour melting into another like the colours on a butterfly's wing; but beneath the fabric must be clamped together with bolts of iron.”
    Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse

  • #6
    Virginia Woolf
    “Other people have faces; Susan and Jinny have faces; they are here. Their world is the real world. The things they lift are heavy. They say Yes, they say No; whereas I shift and change and am seen through in a second. If they meet a housemaid she looks at them without laughing. But she laughs at me. They know what to say if spoken to. They laugh really; they get angry really; while I have to look first and do what other people do when they have done it.”
    Virginia Woolf, The Waves

  • #7
    Virginia Woolf
    “Yet, she said to herself, from the dawn of time odes have been sung to love; wreaths heaped and roses; and if you asked nine people out of ten they would say they wanted nothing but this--love; while the women, judging from her own experience, would all the time be feeling, This is not what we want; there is nothing more tedious, puerile, and inhumane than this; yet it is also beautiful and necessary.”
    Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse
    tags: love

  • #8
    Virginia Woolf
    “Submit to me."

    So she said nothing, but looked doggedly and sadly at the shore, wrapped in its mantle of peace; as if the people there had fallen alseep, she thought; were free like smoke, were free to come and go like ghosts. They have no suffering there, she thought.”
    Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse

  • #9
    Virginia Woolf
    “There is no gate, no lock, no bolt that you can set upon the freedom of my mind.”
    Virginia Woolf, A Room of One鈥檚 Own

  • #10
    Virginia Woolf
    “There must be another life, she thought, sinking back into her chair, exasperated. Not in dreams; but here and now, in this room, with living people. She felt as if she were standing on the edge of a precipice with her hair blown back; she was about to grasp something that just evaded her. There must be another life, here and now, she repeated. This is too short, too broken. We know nothing, even about ourselves.”
    Virginia Woolf, The Years

  • #11
    Virginia Woolf
    “When people are happy they have a reserve upon which to draw, whereas she was like a wheel without a tyre”
    Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway

  • #12
    Virginia Woolf
    “Would there be trees if we didn't see them?”
    Virginia Woolf, The Years

  • #13
    Virginia Woolf
    “Half the time she did things not simply, not for themselves; but to make people think this or that; perfect idiocy she knew for no one was ever for a second taken in.”
    Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway

  • #14
    Virginia Woolf
    “My mind turned by anxiety, or other cause, from its scrutiny of blank paper, is like a lost child鈥搘andering the house, sitting on the bottom step to cry.”
    Virginia Woolf, A Writer's Diary

  • #15
    Virginia Woolf
    “Nature, who has played so many queer tricks upon us, making us so unequally of clay and diamonds, of rainbow and granite, and stuffed them into a case, often of the most incongruous, for the poet has a butcher鈥檚 face and the butcher a poet鈥檚; nature, who delights in muddle and mystery, so that even now (the first of November, 1927) we know not why we go upstairs, or why we come down again, our most daily movements are like the passage of a ship on an unknown sea, and the sailors at the mast-head ask, pointing their glasses to the horizon: Is there land or is there none? to which, if we are prophets, we make answer 鈥淵es鈥; if we are truthful we say 鈥淣o鈥; nature, who has so much to answer for besides the perhaps unwieldy length of this sentence, has further complicated her task and added to our confusion by providing not only a perfect ragbag of odds and ends within us鈥攁 piece of a policeman鈥檚 trousers lying cheek by jowl with Queen Alexandra鈥檚 wedding veil鈥攂ut has contrived that the whole assortment shall be lightly stitched together by a single thread. Memory is the seamstress, and a capricious one at that. Memory runs her needle in and out, up and down, hither and thither. We know not what comes next, or what follows after. Thus, the most ordinary movement in the world, such as sitting down at a table and pulling the inkstand towards one, may agitate a thousand odd, disconnected fragments, now bright, now dim, hanging and bobbing and dipping and flaunting, like the underlinen of a family of fourteen on a line in a gale of wind. Instead of being a single, downright, bluff piece of work of which no man need feel ashamed, our commonest deeds are set about with a fluttering and flickering of wings, a rising and falling of lights.”
    Virginia Woolf, Orlando

  • #16
    Virginia Woolf
    “Once conform, once do what other people do because they do it, and a lethargy steals over all the finer nerves and faculties of the soul.”
    Virginia Woolf

  • #17
    Virginia Woolf
    “The roar of the traffic, the passage of undifferentiated
    faces, this way and that way, drugs me into dreams; rubs the
    features from faces. People might walk through me. And what is
    this moment of time, this particular day in which I have found
    myself caught? The growl of traffic might be any uproar - forest trees or
    the roar of wild beasts. Time has whizzed back an inch or two on its reel;
    our short progress has been cancelled. I think also that our bodies are in truth
    naked. We are only lightly covered with buttoned cloth; and beneath these
    pavements are shells, bones and silence.”
    Virginia Woolf, The Waves

  • #18
    Virginia Woolf
    “Our apparitions, the things you know us by, are simply childish. Beneath it is all dark, it is all spreading, it is unfathomably deep; but now and again we rise to the surface and that is what you see us by.”
    Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse

  • #19
    Virginia Woolf
    “There is no stability in this world. Who is to say what meaning there is in anything? Who is to foretell the flight of a word? It is a balloon that sails over tree-tops. To speak of knowledge is futile. All is experiment and adventure. We are forever mixing ourselves with unknown quantities. What is to come? I know not. But, as I put down my glass I remember; I am engaged to be married. I am to dine with my friends tonight. I am Bernard.”
    Virginia Woolf, The Waves

  • #20
    Virginia Woolf
    “If I could believe," said Rhoda, "that I should grow old in pursuit and change, I should be rid of my fear: nothing persists. One moment does not lead to another. The door opens and the tiger leaps. You do not see me come...I cannot make one moment merge in the next. To me they are all violent, all separate; and if I fall under the shock of the leap of the moment you will be on me, tearing me to pieces. I have no end in view. I do not know how to run minute to minute, and hour to hour, solving them by some natural force until they make the whole and indivisible mass that you call life. Because you have an end in view--one person, is it, to sit beside, an idea is it, your beauty is it? I do not know--your days and hours pass like the boughs of forest trees and the smooth green of forest rides to a hound running in the scent...
    But since I wish above all things to have lodgment, I pretend, as I go upstairs lagging behind Jinny and Susan, to have an end in view. I pull on my stockings as I see them pull on theirs. I wait for you to speak and then speak like you. I am drawn here across London to a particular spot, to a particular place, not to see you or you or you, but to light my fire at the general blaze of you who love wholly, indivisibly, and without caring in the moment.”
    Virginia Woolf

  • #21
    Virginia Woolf
    “And it was awfully strange, he thought, how she still had the power, as she came tinkling, rustling, still had the power as she came across the room, to make the moon, which he detested, rise at Bourton on the terrace in the summer sky.”
    Virginia Woolf, Mrs Dalloway

  • #22
    Virginia Woolf
    “After that, how unbelievable death was! - that is must end; and no one in the whole world would know how she had loved it all.”
    Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway

  • #23
    Virginia Woolf
    “There is a coherence in things, a stability; something... is immune from change and shines out... in the face of the flowing, the fleeting, the spectral, like a ruby. ”
    Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse

  • #24
    Virginia Woolf
    “I have sought happiness through many ages and not found it.”
    Virginia Woolf, Orlando

  • #25
    Virginia Woolf
    “There was no freedom in life, and certainly there was none in death鈥”
    Virginia Woolf, The Waves

  • #26
    Virginia Woolf
    “For the truth is (let her ignore it) that human beings have neither kindness, nor faith, nor charity beyond what serves to increase the pleasure of the moment.”
    Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway

  • #27
    Virginia Woolf
    “I am overwhelmed with things I ought to have written about and never found the proper words.”
    Virginia Woolf, The Diary of Virginia Woolf, Volume One: 1915-1919

  • #28
    Virginia Woolf
    “Such fools we are, she thought, crossing Victoria Street. For Heaven only knows why one loves it so, how one sees it so, making it up, building it round one, tumbling it, creating it every moment afresh; but the veriest frumps, the most dejected of miseries sitting on doorsteps (drink their downfall) do the same; can't be dealt with, she felt positive, by Acts of Parliament for that very reason: they love life. In people's eyes, in the swing, tramp and trudge; in the bellow and the uproar; the carriages, motor cars, omnibuses, vans, sandwich men shuffling and swinging; brass bands; barrel organs; in the triumph and the jingle and the strange high singing of some aeroplane overhead was what she loved; life; London; this moment of June.”
    Virginia Woolf

  • #29
    Virginia Woolf
    “Distorted realities have always been my cup of tea.”
    Virginia Woolf, Selected Diaries

  • #30
    Virginia Woolf
    “What has praise and fame to do with poetry? Was not writing poetry a secret transaction, a voice answering a voice? So that all this chatter and praise, and blame and meeting people who admired one and meeting people who did not admire one was as ill suited as could be to the thing itself- a voice answering a voice. ”
    Virginia Woolf, Orlando



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