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Mrs Dalloway And To The Lighhouse By

Virginia Woolf Essay, Research Paper


In her writings, Virginia Woolf wanted to capture the realness of life, as one


would live it. In turn, Woolf?s shared the significant elements of her life in


her poetic prose novels, Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse, as a relative


self-portrayal. In these books Woolf captured the life as she had lived it,


performing this task in three different layers of depth. For a general sense, by


allowing the characters to live in a similar society as her own, Woolf depicted


her society in her writing. In a deeper sense, many of Woolf?s family members,


relationships, and characteristics were symbolically illustrated through the


minor literary characters on a more personal level. Moreover, Woolf displayed


her views, beliefs, and personal events through the conscience of the main


characters. Commonly, people believe that Woolf had an ideal family. Born into


an aristocratic family, her father, Sir Leslie Stephen, was an eminent editor,


journalist, and a biographer; her husband, Leonard Woolf, also was an aristocrat


writer, who had a membership in an intellectual circle, Bloomsbury Group, along


with Virginia Woolf. Similarly, Woolf planned both Mrs. Dalloway and To the


Lighthouse to be the stories of two aristocratic families. Virginia Woolf lived


from the late Victorian Era until the beginning of King George VI?s reign,


through both the climax of Britain?s prosperity and political supremacy and


the decline of such political power which was due to the First World War. Yet,


in these transitions of Britain?s political status, new ideologies, such as


feminism, were developing. From the late Victorian Era to the end of First World


War marked a period in which the people attempted to accomplish the new beliefs


and ideologies, usually resulting in effective movements. Most of these ideas


were an antithesis of prewar traditions that were led by Modernist, the


questioners of tradition, in literary movements. Feminism was one of the popular


new ideologies, which generally began through writers, artists, and women of the


aristocracy, for they were the ones who were politically aware of what was going


on in Britain and on Continent. Furthermore, people, especially the middle and


the upper classes, enjoyed enormous prosperity that was brought in by


imperialism and the Industrial Revolution. Prosperity drew people to capitalism


and investments in foreign countries, for people loved money and were very


avaricious. In her writing, Woolf addressed these Victorian political


characteristics through the meeting of Richard Dalloway, Hugh Whitbread, and


Lady Bruton in Mrs. Dalloway, where Lady Bruton proposes ?a project for


emigrating young people of both sexes born of respectable parents and setting


them up with a fair prospect of doing well in Canada.? Lady Bruton?s strong


independence as a leader shows the movement towards tolerance of women being in


power. This scene also portrays people?s cupidity, since this project was


designed to bring in a substantial amount of profit. In addition, the Victorian


Era was an age of doubt, question, and skepticism towards God, mostly due to


Darwinism. Friction was created between morality and newly developing ideologies


and beliefs. Although a majority of people still attended church, many writers


and artists, especially Modernists, tended to be more agnostic. Likewise Woolf


showed the opposing sides, believers and idealists, through the repulsion of


Mrs. Dalloway against Miss Kilman, as Mrs. Dalloway has noted, ?Had she [Miss


Kilman] even tried to convert any one herself? Did she not wish everybody merely


to be themselves? Let her? if she wanted to; let her stop; then let


her?There was something solemn in it?but love and religion would destroy


that, whatever it was, the privacy of the soul. The odious Kilman would destroy


it.? Britain faced a phase of decline due to the First World War which brought


many changes to people?s lives, although the aristocrats were not as affected


by the war. Some post war effects were loneliness, mental and emotional


disorders, and disintegration usually suffered by middle and lower classes. In


Mrs. Dalloway, the Dalloway family is planning a party while Septimus Smith, a


middle class veteran, is suffering from mental and emotional disorders. Mrs.


Dalloway is suffering from loneliness. However, in To the Lighthouse, the Ramsay


family, also aristocrats, are suffering from the war due to the death of their


veteran son, Anthony Ramsay. Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse are filled with


symbols, notably those that represent or suggest vital people in Woolf?s life.


For example, from her childhood, her father had great influence in Woolf?s


life, for it was because of him that Woolf began to write. Woolf exemplified her


father through Mr. Ramsay in To the Lighthouse. Like Leslie Stephen, Mr. Ramsay


was portrayed as an aristocratic intellectual. Furthermore, Woolf went to the


extreme of details to share the possessions of her father that were significant


to her such as her father?s library, the place where she received education,


and his summerhouse on the Hebrides Islands, the place where her family had


fellowship. Likewise, Mr. Ramsay possessed an excellent library, a place that


symbolically has a different atmosphere from rest of his summerhouse on the Isle


of Skye. If there was one other person who made difference in Woolf? life,


then Leonard Woolf cannot be excluded. He was part of the left wing in the


Parliament and known for his male chauvinistic characteristics; however, with no


doubt, he was noted as a husband who loved his wife very much to take care of


her, even through her mental breakdowns. Woolf portrayed her husband?s role in


her life through both Mr. Richard Dalloway and Mr. Ramsay. Mr. Dalloway


represents the political aspect of Leonard, considering that he was part of the


left wing in the Parliament. In the other aspect, Mr. Ramsay portrays the side


of Leonard that was very dominating and male chauvinistic. Nonetheless, both Mr.


Dalloway and Mr. Ramsay play the role of husbands who love their wife yet have


much difficulty expressing that love. As for Richard Dalloway, he feels that


?the time comes when it can?t be said; one?s too shy to say it, he


thought?to say straight out in so many words (whatever she might think of


him), holding out his flowers, ?I love you.? Why not??Here he was


walking?to say to Clarissa in so many words that he loved her.? Bloomsbury


Group was not only an intellectual circle, but also a second family for Woolf


because it was composed of some of her family members and close friends. Many of


the her Bloosmbury Group colleagues are illustrated through the minor literary


characters with the exception of Vanessa Bell, her sister, her best friend, and


an artist. Her cha

racteristics show comparison to the characteristics of Lily


Briscoe in To the Lighthouse who also is an artist, very close to Mrs. Ramsay.


Regardless of parallelism between Lily Briscoe and Vanessa Bell, many other


members are depicted through the minor characters. The character Peter Walsh, a


government official who works in India, suggests a close friend of Leonard and


Virginia Woolf, John Maynard Keynes. Keynes was an economist who worked in the


India Office and in government economics during the World War I. Although not


constant in opinion, many suggest that Thoby Stephen, Virginia Woolf?s brother


who died in Greece, is implied in the character Anthony Ramsay, who dies in


World War I, since they share in common an untimely death. Nonetheless, if her


novels were to be portrayed as somewhat of autobiographical writings, then


without delivering her beliefs, views and personal events, the novels are simply


empty shells. Accordingly, Woolf delivered her characteristic to the audience


through the main characters of each novel. In Mrs. Dalloway Woolf accomplishes


such a feat through the main characters, Mrs. Dalloway and Septimus Smith, who


are in many ways parallel characters. In a like manner, this was done through


the co-main characters, Mrs. Ramsay and Lily Briscoe. Woolf publicized her


inner-most personal views and beliefs which in general sense ensued from the new


ideologies and beliefs of late Victorian Era. Woolf was a Modernist, and like


most Modernist she was an atheist. This characteristic parallels Mrs. Dalloway


who opposed religion. Furthermore, as feminism was becoming popular during her


days, Woolf partook in its movement. She believed that women could be in charge


and that women were not inferior to men. Lily Briscoe openly displays Woolf?s


belief of women for she, who as an independent woman sees the big picture and


enjoys life without dominating men around her life. Although done in an implied


sense, Mrs. Dalloway and Mrs. Ramsay each represent how impressive of a leader


woman can be as a social and emotional leader of a household. Homosexuality had


played a major component in Woolf?s life. Bloomsbury Group composed of many


homosexuals, including Virginia Woolf herself. Woolf had a homosexual affair


with a journalist by the name of Vita Sackville West. However, Woolf tried to


keep this affair a secret because she was fearful of the society?s criticism.


In this same way Mrs. Dalloway and Sally Secton share a homosexual relationship


which Mrs. Dalloway wants to keep concealed. In a lesser degree this is also


shown in To the Lighthouse through Lily Briscoe and her affection towards Mrs.


Ramsay, although they do not share any sexual relationship: ?Was it, once


more, the deceptiveness of beauty, so that all one?s perceptions, half way to


truth, were tangled What art was there, known to love or cunning?Could loving


as people called it, make her and Mrs. Ramsay one? for it was not knowledge but


unity that she desired?intimacy itself.? There was one major burden that


Woolf had carried throughout her life, anorexia and depression. Perhaps it was


caused due to the sexual abuse that she received as a child by her stepbrother,


perhaps it was something else; however, by all means, this disorder was severe.


Sometime after her first mental breakdown, three suicides were attempted by


Virginia Woolf, with latter attempt resulting in death, were believed to be due


to this disorder. This perspective of Woolf is paralleled in Septimus Smith who


suffers from mental illness and depression as a post-war effect. Septimus


undergoes two mental breakdowns and commits suicide in his third mental


breakdown. Because there is so much parallelism between Woolf and her characters


some believe that Woolf was preparing for her suicide. Many great writers such


as Emily Dickinson and Oscar Wilde voice their opinion through their writings.


Likewise, Woolf shared her opinion, beliefs, and her life through Mrs. Dalloway


and To the Lighthouse. What Woolf believed, the people who she was near to, and


her society made her who she was. In these two novels, Woolf attempted to


address the problems of her generation as social criticism, while addressing the


loneliness of each individual and their reason to find their selves and a lover


or a friend. Thus, Woolf addressed the feminism of the society, the difference


between two social classes, her father, her husband, her homosexual partner, and


her mental disorder through her characters and the setting. To present the whole


picture, Woolf?s society, her family members, and her personal beliefs and


happenings are paralleled in her novels? societies, minor, and main


characters, respectively; display the picture of her novels in three great


layers of depth.


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