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Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941

"The Voyage Out"

Following these thoughts she
looked up and said:
"And there's a sort of beauty in it--there they are at Richmond at this
very moment building things up. They're all wrong, perhaps, but there's
a sort of beauty in it," she repeated. "It's so unconscious, so modest.
And yet they feel things. They do mind if people die. Old spinsters are
always doing things. I don't quite know what they do. Only that was what
I felt when I lived with them. It was very real."
She reviewed their little journeys to and fro, to Walworth, to charwomen
with bad legs, to meetings for this and that, their minute acts of
charity and unselfishness which flowered punctually from a definite view
of what they ought to do, their friendships, their tastes and habits;
she saw all these things like grains of sand falling, falling through
innumerable days, making an atmosphere and building up a solid mass, a
background. Hewet observed her as she considered this.
"Were you happy?" he demanded.
Again she had become absorbed in something else, and he called her back
to an unusually vivid consciousness of herself.
"I was both," she replied. "I was happy and I was miserable. You've no
conception what it's like--to be a young woman." She looked straight at
him. "There are terrors and agonies," she said, keeping her eye on him
as if to detect the slightest hint of laughter.


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