9 Quotes About Woolf

The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn. The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn. The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn. The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn Read more

The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn. The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn. The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn.

The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn. The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn. The great thing about life is that it always gives you something new to learn.

The great thing about life is that it always gives you somethngnnewtollearn

Among the tortures and devastations of life is this then–our...
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Among the tortures and devastations of life is this then–our friends are not able to finish their stories. Virginia Woolf
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Lisbon, to me, is the Lisbon of Pessoa. Just like London is Woolf’s, or rather, Mrs. Dalloway’s. Barcelona is Gaudí's and Rome is da Vinci’s. You see them in every crevice and hear their echoes in every cathedral. I’d like to be the child, or rather, the mother of a city but I neither have a home nor a resting place. My race is humankind. My religion is kindness. My work is love and, well, my city is the walls of your heart. Kamand Kojouri
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They all dreamt of each other that night, as was natural, considering how thin the partitions were between them, and how strangely they had been lifted off the earth to sit next each other in mid-ocean, and see every detail of each others' faces, and hear whatever they chanced to say. Virginia Woolf
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I should never be able to fulfill what is, I understand, the first duty of a lecturer-to hand you after an hour's discourse a nugget of pure truth to wrap up between the pages of your notebooks and keep on the mantelpiece forever". Virginia Woolf
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Are we not acceptable, moon? Are we not lovely sitting together here, I in my satin; he in black and white? Virginia Woolf
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Milly Brush once might almost have fallen in love with these silences. Virginia Woolf
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She sighed, she snored, not that she was asleep, only drowsy and heavy, drowsy and heavy, like a field of clover in the sunshine this hot July day, with the bees going round and about and the yellow butterflies. Virginia Woolf
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A self that goes on changing is a self that goes on living': so too with the biography of that self. And just as lives don't stay still, so life-writing can't be fixed and finalised. Our ideas are shifting about what can be said, our knowledge of human character is changing. The biographer has to pioneer, going 'ahead of the rest of us, like the miner's canary, testing the atmosphere, detecting falsity, unreality, and the presence of obsolete conventions'. So, 'There are some stories which have to be retold by each generation'. She is talking about the story of Shelley, but she could be talking about her own life-story. (Virginia Woolf, p. 11) . Hermione Lee