1,646 Quotes by Virginia Woolf

  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    But the novels of women were not affected only by the necessarily narrow range of the writer's experience. They showed, at least in the nineteenth century, another characteristic which may be traced to the writer's sex. In Middlemarch and in Jane Eyre we are conscious not merely of the writer's character, as we are conscious of the character of Charles Dickens, but we are conscious of a woman's presence of someone resenting the treatment of her sex and pleading for its rights.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    Illness is a part of every human being's experience. It enhances our perceptions and reduces self-consciousness. It is the great confessional; things are said, truths are blurted out which health conceals.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    All looked distant and peaceful and strange. The shore seemed refined, far away, unreal. Already the little distance they had sailed had put them far from it and given it the changed look, the composed look, of something receding in which one has no longer any part.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    This self now as I leant over the gate looking down over fields rolling in waves of colour beneath me made no answer. He threw up no opposition. He attempted no phrase. His fist did not form. I waited. I listened. Nothing came, nothing. I cried then with a sudden conviction of complete desertion. Now there is nothing. No fin breaks the waste of this immeasurable sea. Life has destroyed me. No echo comes when I speak, no varied words. This is more truly death than the death of friends, than the death of youth.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    I got out this diary and read, as one always reads one's own writing; with a kind of guilty intensity.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    To depend upon a profession is a less odious form of slavery than to depend upon a father.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    Let us not take for granted that life exists more fully in what is commonly thought big than in what is commonly thought small.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    But then anyone who's worth anything reads just what he likes, as the mood takes him, and with extravagant enthusiasm.

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  • Author Virginia Woolf
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    Happily, at forty-six I still feel as experimental and on the verge of getting at the truth as ever.

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