The Essays of Virginia Woolf: 1912-1918Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1986 - 448 pagina's Essays beginning at the time of her marriage to Leonard Woolf and ending just after the Armistice. More than half have not been collected previously. "In these essays we see both Woolf's work and her self afresh" (Chicago Tribune). Edited and with an Introduction by Andrew McNeillie; Index. |
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Pagina 163
... remarkable that a volume might be spent in discussion of it . We should scarcely exaggerate our own belief if we said that both seem to forecast a time when character will take on a different aspect under the novelist's hand , when he ...
... remarkable that a volume might be spent in discussion of it . We should scarcely exaggerate our own belief if we said that both seem to forecast a time when character will take on a different aspect under the novelist's hand , when he ...
Pagina 180
... remarkable in each of his volumes is the result of writing not from the man's point of view , but by becoming a child again ; for it is impossible that the most tenacious memory should have been able to store the millions of details ...
... remarkable in each of his volumes is the result of writing not from the man's point of view , but by becoming a child again ; for it is impossible that the most tenacious memory should have been able to store the millions of details ...
Pagina 342
... remarkable gift , so that , having produced this sense of transparency , with its strange power to make us imagine that we are on the threshold of something else , she stops short ; she cannot show us what goes on in the souls thus ...
... remarkable gift , so that , having produced this sense of transparency , with its strange power to make us imagine that we are on the threshold of something else , she stops short ; she cannot show us what goes on in the souls thus ...
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artist beauty Bennett Brooke's characters Charlotte Brontë Coleridge colour Conrad criticism delight Dostoevsky doubt E. M. Forster emotion England English eyes fact feel fiction friends Fyodor Dostoevsky George George Eliot George Meredith ghost gift give Henry James human Ibid imagination interesting Jane Austen John Lady Leonard Woolf literary literature living London look Lord Lord Jim Meredith Meynell mind Miss nature never novel novelist once ourselves passion Pepys perhaps person poems poet poetry prose published quotations quoting reader Reprinted Romance Rupert Brooke Russian Samuel Pepys scene seems sense Shakespeare spirit Stopford Brooke story strange Swinburne talk Tennyson things Thomas Thoreau thought Tolstoy truth verse Victorian Virginia Woolf vision volume VW Essays VW Letters Walt Whitman Whitman William woman women words writing wrote youth