I've been reading this collection of Virginia Woolf's letters for a long time, usually a letter at a time, and it's brought me close to her. She strikes every kind of note: loving, sharp, acute, desperate, funny, gossipy, bitchy, poetic. nostalgic. In many ways her letters are more readable than her novels because with her novels she was trying too hard, too conscious that she was writing a novel. The book begins with letters she wrote as a child and ends with one of her three suicide notes.
I came away with a marvellous collection of quotes:
All we can ever know of ourselves are scraps, spots, and fragments, held in momentary harmony and sympathy.
All good and evil comes from words.
The only thing in the world is music—music and books and one or two pictures.
Too many books have been written already—it’s no use making more.
Let me create you. You have done as much for me.
They were richer beings when they were together.
Letter writing for her was “mere tossing of an omelette.”
I never shall believe, and never have believed, in anything any doctors says…They can guess at what’s the matter, but they can’t put it right.
I am no judge and don’t know from hour to hour whether my gifts are first—second or even tenhth rate. I go from one extreme to another.
If I’m not sure of my brains power I am quite sure of my heart’s power.
I don’t suppose that even the most sensitive author cares what the Guardian says of him—preaching the charities of the parish in the next breath
I don’t think that they [two Cambridge male students] are robust enough to feel very much.
Writing is a divine art, and the more I write and read the more I love it.
I never wash, or do my hair, but stride with gigantic strides over the wild moorside, shouting odes of Pindar, as I leap from crag to crag, and exulting in the air which buffets me, and caresses me, like a stern but affectionate parent.
If you must put books on one side and life on t’other, each is a poor and bloodless thing. But my theory is they mix indistinguishably…
Virginia sometimes referred to herself collectively as “the apes.”
A true letter should be as a film of wax pressed close the graving in the mind; but if I followed my own prescription this sheet would be scored with some very tortuous and angular incisions.
A mind that knows not Gibbon knows not morality.
I’m inclined to let her name stand alone on the page. It contains all the beauty of the sky, and the melancholy of the sea, and the laughter of the Dolphins in its circumference…a breathing peace like the respiration of Earth itself.
The women in her first novels were “subtle, sensitive tactful, gracious, delicately perceptive, and perspicacious” whereas the men were “obtuse, vulgar, blind, florid, rude, tactless, emphatic, indelicate, vain tyrannical, and stupid.” Comments from Clive Bell
To be 29 and unmarried—to be a failure—childless—insane too, no writer. Virginia Woolf, 1911
My quarrel with marriage is that the pace is so slow, when you are two people.
I’ve never met a writer who didn’t nurse enormous vanity.
Things in London were much the same as usual: a good deal of love, spite, art, gossip, and opera.
Why did you never prepare me for the Scottish dialect, and the melodious voice which makes me laugh whenever I hear it?
One can get within speaking distance of you, which is quite impossible with an ordinary male doctor.
I read [Henry James] and can’t find anything but faintly tinged rose water, urbane and sleek, but vulgar, and just as pale as Walter Lamb.
I feel a rabbit, who’s really a hare, on a lawn with other rabbits, who are really rabbits.
Of course, literature is the only spiritual and humane career. Even painting tends to dumbness, and music turns people erotic, whereas the more you write the nicer you become.
Did you ever read George Eliot? Whatever one may say about the Victorians, there’s no doubt they had twice our—not exactly brains—perhaps hearts. I don’t quite know what it is; but I’m a good deal impressed.
What Virginia thinks Vanessa thinks of Virginia’s life in contrast to hers: “I do think you lead a dull respectable absurd life—lots of money, no children, everything settled: and conventional. Look at me now—only sixpence a year—lovers—Paris—life—love—art—excitement—God! I must be off.”
On the writing of Proust: such is the astonishing vibration and saturation and intensification that he procures—there’s something sexual in it.
How does one ‘work’ at one’s novel? Well, scribbling journalism is one way, and lunching with Lady Colefax to meet Hugh Walpole, is another.
Life grows steadily more enchanting the fatter one gets. (quoting Roger Fry)
“We [the Hogarth Press] are publishing all of Dr Freud, and I glance at the proof and read how Mr
AB threw a bottle of red ink on the sheets of his marriage bed to excuse his impotence to the housemaid, but threw it in the wrong place, which unhinged his wife’s mind, and it is to this day that she pours claret on the dinner table. We could all go on like that for hours, and yet these Germans thing it proves something—beside their own gull-like imbecility.” Virginia Woolf, 1924
He [Lytton Strachey] says that she [Elizabeth I] wrote to an ambassador: “Had I been crested and not cloven you would not have dared write to me thus.”
You’re abundant in so many ways, and I a mere pea tied to a stick. [To Vita Sackville West]
Our souls are so creased and soured in meaning that we can only unfold them when we are alone.
I slightly distrust or suspect the maternal passion. It is obviously immeasurable and unscrupulous.
I was always sexually cowardly, and never walked over Mountains with Counts as you did, nor plucked all the flowers of life in a bunch as you did. My terror of real life has always kept me in a nunnery….And then I married, and my brain went up in a shower of fireworks. As an experience, madness is terrific I can assure you, and not to be sniffed at; and in its lava I still find most of the things I write about. It shoots out of one everything shaped final, and not in mere driblets, as sanity does. And the six months—not three--I lay in bed taught me a good deal about what is called oneself. 1930
But what I want of you is illusion—to make the world dance. 1930
I have three whole days of solitude still—Monday, Thursday, and Friday. The others are packed with this damnable disease of seeing people. Please tell me what psychological necessity makes people wish to “go and see” so and so?
What’s the point of writing if one doesn’t make a fool of oneself?
I should like to die with a complete map of the world in my head.
What do I know of the inner meaning of dreams, I whose life is entirely founded on dreams (yes, I will come to the suicide dream one of these days). Written in 1930, 11 years before she killed herself
What’s the point of writing if one doesn’t make a fool of oneself?
If I call him not a born writer, it’s because he writes too well—takes no risks—doesn’t plunge and stumble and jump at boughs beyond his grasp, as I, to be modest, have done in my day.
“I’m the happiest woman in England,” I said to Leonard yesterday, for no reason, except that we had hot rolls for breakfast and the cat had eaten the chicken.
The general impossibility, which over comes me sometimes, of ANY understanding between two people.
I can’t altogether lay hands on my meaning.
It [grief at the death of Lytton Strachey] is like having the globe of the future perpetually smashed.
What a passion her love was…an elemental passion, unscrupulous, tyrannic, pure. [Of the love of Gwen Raverat for her husband.]
I write in the morning—to boil my year’s pot; but from 4.30 to 1.30 I read. Isn’t that gorgeous? …books: printed, solid, entire: Do you know I get such a passion for reading sometimes it’s like the other passion—writing—only the wrong side of the carpet. Heaven knows what either amounts to.
My own brain is to me the most unaccountable of machinery—always buzzing, humming, soaring, roaring, diving, and then buried in mud. And why? What’s this passion for?...doesn’t it break your heart almost to think of me, with this passion, always consumed with the desire to read, chopped, chafed, bugged, battered by the voices, the hands, the faces, the bodily presence of those who are pleased to call themselves my friends?
I want to know all that you are thinking and seeing, and I want to be there, and I want to be there. (To Vita.)
She’s [Vanessa Bell] taken her own line in London life; refuses to be a celebrated painter; buys no clothes; sees whom she likes as she likes; and altogether leads an indomitable, sensible and very sublime existence.
If you notice a dancing light on the water, that’s me. [To Vanessa Bell after the death of Julian her son]
I can’t say what it means to me to come into a room and see you sitting there. [In the same letter as above]
Asking him [T S Eliot] a question is like putting a penny in the slot of the Albert Hall.
I think human beings are fundamentally crushed by a sense of their insignificance.
A voice so thrilling ne'er was heard
In springtime from the cuckoo bird
Breaking the silence of the seas
Among the farthest Hebrides
Wordsworth
Here I cook dinner, so must stop, just, it happens, as a flock of fine feathered ideas perches on my wire.
I think that the art of painting is the art for one’s old age. I respect it more and more. I adore its severity; it’s bareness from impurity. All books are now rank with the slimy seaweed of politics; mouldy and mildewed….Those distorted human characters are to me what the olive tree against the furrowed hill is to you [her painter sister, Vanessa]
The immense reciprocity demanded by civilisation.
Another confused note in the general clamour.
I always think of my books as music before I write them.