28 Quotes by Virginia Woolf about Literature
- Author Virginia Woolf
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Shakespeare could not have written without Marlowe, or Marlowe without Chaucer, or Chaucer without those forgotten poets who paved the ways and tamed the natural saveragery of the tongue. For masterpieces are not single and solitary births; they are the outcome of many years of thinking in common, of thinking by the body of the people, so that the experience of the mass is behind the single voice.
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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The fact about contemporaries is that they're doing the same thing on another railway line: one resents their distracting one, flashing past, the wrong way- something like that: from timidity, partly, one keeps one's eyes on one's own road.
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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Among the tortures and devastations of life is this then—our friends are not able to finish their stories.
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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In the flailing light they all looked sharp-edged and ethereal and divided by great distances
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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Clarissa had a theory in those days - they had heaps of theories, always theories, as young people have. It was to explain the feeling they had of dissatisfaction; not knowing people; not being known. For how could they know each other? You met every day; then not for six months, or years. It was unsatisfactory, they agreed, how little one knew people.
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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...to use the little kick of energy which opposition supplies to be more vigorously oneself.
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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She would not have cared to confess how infinitely she preferred the exactitude, the star-like impersonality, of figures to the confusion, agitation, and vagueness of the finest prose.
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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I rejoice to concur with the common reader; for by the common sense of readers, uncorrupted by literary prejudices, after all the refinements of subtilty and the dogmatism of learning, must be finally decided all claim to poetical honours.
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- Author Virginia Woolf
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And again she felt alone in the presence of her old antagonist, life.
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