37 Quotes by Virginia Woolf about Thinking

  • Author Virginia Woolf
  • Quote

    The most important thing is not to think very much about oneself. To investigate candidly the charge; but not fussily, not very anxiously. On no account to retaliate by going to the other extreme -- thinking too much.

  • Tags
  • Share



  • Author Virginia Woolf
  • Quote

    [Final diary entry:] Occupation is essential. And now with some pleasure I find that it's seven; and must cook dinner. Haddock and sausage meat. I think it is true that one gains a certain hold on sausage and haddock by writing them down.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Virginia Woolf
  • Quote

    Yet Byron never made tea as you do, who fill the pot so that when you put the lid on the tea spills over. There is a brown pool on the table--it is running among your books and papers. Now you mop it up, clumsily, with your pocket-hankerchief. You then stuff your hankerchief back into your pocket--that is not Byron; that is so essentially you that if I think of you in twenty years' time, when we are both famous, gouty and intolerable, it will be by that scene: and if you are dead, I shall weep.

  • Tags
  • Share


  • Author Virginia Woolf
  • Quote

    That perhaps is your task--to find the relation between things that seem incompatible yet have a mysterious affinity, to absorb every experience that comes your way fearlessly and saturate it completely so that your poem is a whole, not a fragment; to re-think human life into poetry and so give us tragedy again and comedy by means of characters not spun out at length in the novelist's way, but condensed and synthesized in the poet's way--that is what we look to you to do now.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Virginia Woolf
  • Quote

    The immense success of our life is, I think, that our treasure is hid away; or rather in such common things that nothing can touch it.

  • Tags
  • Share