Classic Audiobook Collection - To The Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf ~ Full Audiobook [drama]

Episode Date: June 27, 2023

To The Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf audiobook. Genre: drama Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse invites listeners into the summer home of the Ramsay family on the Isle of Skye, where a simple plan to ...visit a distant lighthouse becomes a quiet measure of desire, disappointment, and devotion. At the center are Mr. and Mrs. Ramsay: he, a celebrated but anxious intellectual hungry for reassurance; she, luminous in her attention to others, holding the household together through warmth and tact. Around them gather their children and a circle of guests, including the painter Lily Briscoe, who struggles to make her vision real on canvas while resisting the pressures and judgments that surround her. As days pass and years press in, the promise of the lighthouse trip lingers like a question: what can be saved of a moment, a family, a work of art? Moving through shifting perspectives and sensations, Woolf traces how love and ambition, memory and time, shape the inner lives of ordinary people. The novel becomes an intimate exploration of consciousness and the fragile, persistent hope of reaching some fixed point beyond change. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:32:09) Chapter 02 (01:02:10) Chapter 03 (01:38:19) Chapter 04 (02:15:43) Chapter 05 (02:42:11) Chapter 06 (03:01:54) Chapter 07 (03:35:19) Chapter 08 (04:09:41) Chapter 09 (04:37:06) Chapter 10 (04:58:04) Chapter 11 (05:17:34) Chapter 12 (05:45:34) Chapter 13 (06:18:39) Chapter 14 (06:43:16) Chapter 15 (07:08:25) Chapter 16 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Section 1 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. Part 1. The Window. Chapter 1. Yes, of course, if it's fine tomorrow, said Mrs. Ramsey. But you'll have to be up with the lark, she added. To her son, these words conveyed an extraordinary joy, as if it was settled, the expedition were bound to take place, and the wonder to which he had looked forward, for years and years it seemed,
Starting point is 00:00:31 was, after a night's darkness and a day's sail, within touch. Since he belonged, even at the age of six, to that great clan which cannot keep this feeling separate from that, but must let future prospects, with their joys and sorrows, cloud what is actually at hand, since to such people, even in earliest childhood, any turn in the wheel of sensation has the power to crystallise and transfix the moment upon which its gloom or radiance rests. James Ramsey, sitting on the floor, cutting out pictures from the illustrated catalogue of the Army and Navy stores, endowed the picture of a refrigerator, as his mother spoke, with heavenly bliss. It was fringed with joy. The wheelbarrow, the lawnmower, the sound of poplar
Starting point is 00:01:24 trees, leaves whitening before rain, rooks coring, brooms knocking, dresses rustling. All these were so coloured and distinguished in his mind that he had already his private code, his secret language, though he appeared the image of stark and uncompromising severity, with his high forehead and his fierce blue eyes, impeccably candid and pure, frowning slightly at the sight of human frailty, said that his mother, watching him guide his scissors neatly round the refrigerator, imagined him all red and ermine on the bench, or directing a stern and momentous enterprise in some crisis of public affairs. But, said his father, stopping in front of the drawing-room window, it won't be fine.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Had there been an axe handy, a poker, or any weapon that would have gashed a hole in his his father's breast and killed him there and then, James would have seized it. Such were the extremes of emotion that Mr. Ramsey excited in his children's breasts by his mere presence. Standing, as now, lean as a knife, narrow as the blade of one, grinning sarcastically, not only with the pleasure of disillusioning his son and casting ridicule upon his wife, who was ten thousand times better in every way than he was, James thought. but also with some secret conceit at his own accuracy of judgment. What he said was true. It was always true.
Starting point is 00:03:03 He was incapable of untruth, never tampered with a fact, never altered a disagreeable word to suit the pleasure or convenience of any mortal being, least of all his own children, who, sprung from his loins, should be aware from childhood that life is difficult, facts uncompromising, and the passage to that fabled land where our brightest hopes are extinguished, our frail barks founder in darkness. Here Mr. Ramsey would straighten his back and narrow his little blue eyes upon the horizon, one that needs, above all, courage, truth, and the power to endure.
Starting point is 00:03:44 But it may be fine. I expect it will be fine, said Mrs. Ramsey, making some little twist of the reddish-brown stocking she was knitting impatiently. If she finished it tonight, if they did go to the lighthouse after all, it was to be given to the lighthouse keeper for his little boy, who was threatened with a tuberculous hip, together with a pile of old magazines and some tobacco, indeed whatever she could find lying about, not really wanted but only littering the room,
Starting point is 00:04:13 to give those poor fellows, who must be bored to death sitting all day with nothing to do, but polish the lamp and trim the wick and rake about on their scrap of garden, something to amuse them. For how would you like to be shut up for a whole month at a time, and possibly more in stormy weather, upon a rock the size of a tennis lawn, she would ask, and to have no letters or newspapers, and to see nobody? If you were married, not to see your wife, not to know how your children were. If they were ill, if they had fallen down and broken their legs or arms, to see the same dreary waves breaking week after week,
Starting point is 00:04:53 and then a dreadful storm coming, and the windows covered with spray, and birds dashed against the lamp, and the whole place rocking, and not being able to put your nose out of doors for fear of being swept into the sea. How would you like that? she asked, addressing herself particularly to her daughters.
Starting point is 00:05:13 So, she added, rather differently, one must take them whatever comforts one, can. It's due worst, said the atheist Tansley, holding his bony fingers spread so that the wind blew through them, for he was sharing Mr. Ramsey's evening walk up and down, up and down the terrace. That is to say, the wind blew from the worst possible direction for landing at the lighthouse. Yes, he did say disagreeable things, Mrs. Ramsey admitted. It was odious of him to rub this in, and make James still more disappointed. But, at the same time, she would not let them laugh at him.
Starting point is 00:05:55 The atheist, they called him, the little atheist. Rose marked him, Prue marked him. Andrew, Jasper, Roger marked him. Even old badger without a tooth in his head had bit him. For being, as Nancy put it, the hundred and tenth young man to chase them all the way up to the Hebrides, when it was ever so much nicer to be a little. alone. "'Nonsense,' said Mrs. Ramsey, with great severity.
Starting point is 00:06:23 Apart from the habit of exaggeration which they had from her, and from the implication, which was true, that she asked too many people to stay and had to lodge some in the town, she could not bear incivility to her guests, to young men in particular, who were poor as church mice, exceptionally able, her husband said, his great admirers, and come there for a holiday. Indeed, she had the whole of the other sex under her protection, for reasons she could not explain, for their chivalry and valour, for the fact that they negotiated treaties, ruled India, controlled finance. Finally, for an attitude towards herself which no woman could fail to feel or to find agreeable, something trustful, childlike, reverential, which an old
Starting point is 00:07:15 woman could take from a young man without loss of dignity, and woe betide the girl, pray heaven it was none of her daughters, who did not feel the worth of it, and all that it implied to the marrow of her bones. She turned with severity upon Nancy. He had not chased them, she said. He had been asked. They must find a way out of it all. There might be some simpler way, some less laborious way, she sighed. When she looked in the glass and saw her hair grey, her cheeks sunk. At fifty, she thought, possibly she might have managed things better, her husband, money, his books.
Starting point is 00:07:58 But for her own part, she would never for a single second regret her decision, evade difficulties, or slur over duties. She was now formidable to behold, and it was only in silence, looking up from their plates, after she had spoken so severely about Charles Tansley that her daughters, Prue, Nancy, Rose, could sport with infidel ideas which they had brood for themselves of a life different from hers.
Starting point is 00:08:27 In Paris, perhaps, a wilder life, not always taking care of some man or other, for there was in all their minds a mute questioning of deference and chivalry, of the Bank of England and the Indian Empire, of ringed fingers and lace, Though to them all there was something in this of the essence of beauty, which called out the manliness in their girlish hearts, and made them, as they sat at table beneath their mother's eyes, honour her strange severity, her extreme courtesy, like a queen's raising from
Starting point is 00:09:00 the mud to wash a beggar's dirty foot, when she admonished them so very severely about that wretched atheist who had chased them, or, speaking accurately, been invited to stay with them, in the Isle of Sky. There'll be no landing at the lighthouse tomorrow, said Charles Tansley, clapping his hands together as he stood at the window with her husband. Surely he had said enough. She wished they would both leave her and James alone and go on talking. She looked at him.
Starting point is 00:09:33 He was such a miserable specimen, the children said, all humps and hollows. He couldn't play cricket. He poked. He shuffled. He was a sarcastic brute, Andrew said. They knew what he liked best, to be forever walking up and down, up and down with Mr. Ramsey, and saying who had won this, who had won that, who was a first-rate man at Latin verses,
Starting point is 00:09:59 who was brilliant but I think fundamentally unsound, who was undoubtedly the ablest fellow in Balliol, who had buried his light temporarily at Bristol or Bedford, but was bound to be heard of later when his prologomena, of which Mr. Tansley had the first pages in proof with him if Mr. Ramsey would like to see them, to some branch of mathematics or philosophy, saw the light of day. That was what they talked about. She could not help laughing herself sometimes. She said the other day something about waves mountains high. Yes, said Charles Tansley, it was a little rough.
Starting point is 00:10:38 "'Aunt you drenched to the skin?' she had said. "'Damp, not wet through,' said Mr. Tansley, "'pinching his sleeve, feeling his socks. "'But it was not that they minded,' the children said. "'It was not his face. It was not his manners. "'It was him, his point of view. "'When they talked about something interesting, "'people, music, history, anything,
Starting point is 00:11:05 "'even said it was a fine evening, "'so why not sit out of doors? "'Then what they complained of about Charles Tansley, was that until he had turned the whole thing round, and made it somehow reflect himself and disparage them, he was not satisfied. And he would go to picture galleries, they said, and he would ask one, did one like his tie? God knows, said Rose, one did not. Disappearing as stealthily as stags from the dinner table, directly the meal was over, the eight sons and daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey sought the bedrooms, their fastness in a house where there was no other privacy to debate anything,
Starting point is 00:11:45 everything. Tansley's tie, the passing of the reform bill, seabirds and butterflies, people, while the sun poured into those attics, which a plank alone separated from each other, so that every footstep could be plainly heard, and the Swiss girl sobbing for her father who was dying of cancer in the valley of the Grisont, and lit up bats, flannel. straw hats, ink pots, paint pots, beetles and the skulls of small birds. While it drew from the long frilled strips of seaweed pinned to the wall, a smell of salt and weeds, which was in the towels too, gritty with sand from bathing. Strife, divisions, difference of opinion, prejudices twisted into the very fibre of being.
Starting point is 00:12:35 Oh, that they should begin so early, Mrs. Ramsey deplored. They were so critical, her children. They talked such nonsense. She went from the dining room, holding James by the hand, since he would not go with the others. It seemed to her such nonsense, inventing differences, when people, heaven knows, were different enough without that. The real differences, she thought, standing by the drawing-room window, are enough, quite enough. She had in mind at the moment, rich and poor, high and low, the great in birth receiving from her, half grudging, some respect, for had she not in her veins the blood of that very noble, if slightly mythical Italian house, whose daughters, scattered about English drawing-rooms in the 19th century, had lisped so charmingly, had stormed so wildly, and all her wit and her bearing and her temper came from them, and not for her from the sluggish English or the cold scotch. But more profoundly she ruminated the other problem, of rich and poor, and the things she saw
Starting point is 00:13:46 with her own eyes, weekly, daily, here or in London, when she visited this widow or that struggling wife in person with a bag on her arm, and a notebook and pencil, with which she wrote down in columns carefully ruled for the purpose, wages and spendings, employment and unemployment, in the hope that thus she would cease to be a private woman whose charity was half a sop to her own indignation, half a relief to her own curiosity, and become what with her untrained mind she greatly admired, an investigator, elucidating the social problem. Insoluble problems they were, it seemed to her, standing there, holding James by the hand. He had followed her into the drawing-room, that young man they'd
Starting point is 00:14:35 laughed at. He was standing by the table, fidgeting with something, awkwardly, feeling himself out of things, as she knew without turning round. They had all gone. The children, Minter Doyle and Paul Raleighley, Augustus Carmichael, her husband. They had all gone. So she turned with a sigh and said, Would it bore you to come with me, Mr. Tansley? She had a dull errand in the town. She had a letter or two to write, she would be ten minutes, perhaps, she would put on her hat. And, with her basket and her parasol, there she was again, ten minutes later, giving out a sense of being ready, of being equipped for a jaunt, which, however, she must interrupt for a moment, as they passed the tennis lawn, to ask Mr. Carmichael, who was basking with his yellow cat's-eyes
Starting point is 00:15:30 a jar, so that like a cat's, they seemed to reflect the branches moving or the clouds passing, but to give no inkling of any inner thoughts or emotion whatsoever, if he wanted anything. For they were making the great expedition, she said, laughing. They were going to the town. Stamps, writing paper, tobacco, she suggested, stopping by his side. But no, he wanted nothing. His hands clasped themselves over his capacious paunch. His eyes blinked, as if he would have liked to reply kindly to these blandishments. She was seductive, but a little nervous. But could not, sunk as he was in a grey-green somnolence which embraced them all,
Starting point is 00:16:15 without need of words, in a vast and benevolent lethargy of well-wishing. All the house, all the world, all the people in it. for he had slipped into his glass at lunch a few drops of something, which accounted, the children thought, for the vivid streak of canary yellow in moustache and beard that were otherwise milk white. No nothing, he murmured. He should have been a great philosopher, said Mrs. Ramsey,
Starting point is 00:16:43 as they went down the road to the fishing village, but he had made an unfortunate marriage. Holding her black parasol very erect, and moving with an indescribable air of everything, expectation, as if she were going to meet someone round the corner, she told the story, an affair at Oxford with some girl, an early marriage, poverty, going to India, translating a little poetry, very beautifully, I believe, being willing to teach the boys Persian or Hindustani, but what really was the use of that, and then lying as they saw him
Starting point is 00:17:19 on the lawn? It flattered him, snubbed as he had been. It soothed him that Mrs. Ramsey should tell him this. Charles Tansley revived. Insinuating, too, as she did, the greatness of man's intellect, even in its decay, the subjection of all wives, not that she blamed the girl and the marriage had been happy enough, she believed, to the husband's labours. She made him feel better pleased with himself than he had done yet, and he would have liked,
Starting point is 00:17:51 had they taken a cab, for example, to have paid the fact. As for her little bag, might he not carry that? No, no, she said. She always carried that herself. She did, too. Yes, he felt that in her. He felt many things, something in particular that excited him and disturbed him for reasons which he could not give. He would like her to see him, gowned and hooded, walking in a procession. A fellowship, a professorship. A professorship. He felt capable of anything and saw himself. But what was she looking at? At a man pasting a bill.
Starting point is 00:18:33 The vast flapping sheet flattened itself out, and each shove of the brush revealed fresh legs, hoops, horses, glistening reds and blues, beautifully smooth, until half the wall was covered with the advertisement of a circus, a hundred horsemen, twenty performing seals, lions, tigers. Craning forwards, for she was short-sighted, she read it out. We'll visit this town, she read. It was terribly dangerous work for a one-armed man, she exclaimed, to stand on top of a ladder like that. His left arm had been cut off in a reaping machine two years ago.
Starting point is 00:19:15 Let us all go, she cried, moving on, as if all those riders and horses had filled her with childlike exultation and made her forget her pity. Let's go, he said, repeating her words, clicking them out, however, with a self-consciousness that made her wince. Let us all go to the circus. No, he could not say it right, he could not feel it right. But why not, she wondered, what was wrong with him then? She liked him warmly at the moment.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Had they not been taken, she asked, to circuses when they were children? Never, he answered, as if she asked the very thing he wanted, had been longing all these days to say how they did not go to circuses. It was a large family, nine brothers and sisters, and his father was a working man. My father is a chemist, Mrs. Ramsey. He keeps a shop. He himself had paid his own way since he was thirteen. often he went without a great coat in winter. He could never return hospitality.
Starting point is 00:20:28 Those were his parched, stiff words, at college. He had to make things last twice the time other people did. He smoked the cheapest tobacco, shag, the same the old men did in the keys. He worked hard, seven hours a day. His subject was now the influence of something upon somebody. They were walking on, and Mrs. Ramsey did not quite catch the meaning, only the words here and there, dissertation, fellowship, readership, lectureship.
Starting point is 00:21:00 She could not follow the ugly academic jargon that rattled itself off so glibly, but said to herself that she saw now why going to the circus had knocked him off his perch, poor little man, and why he came out instantly, with all that about his father and mother and brothers and sisters, and she would see to it that they didn't laugh at his. him any more, she would tell Prue about it. What he would have liked, she supposed, would have been to say how he had gone not to the circus but to Ibsen with the Ramses. He was an awful prig, oh yes, an insufferable bore. Four, though they had reached the town now, and were in the main street, with carts grinding past on the cobbles, still he went on talking about settlements
Starting point is 00:21:47 and teaching and working men and helping our own class and lectures, till she gathered that he had got back entire self-confidence, had recovered from the circus, and was about, and now again she liked him warmly, to tell her, but here the houses falling away on both sides, they came out on the key, and the whole bay spread before them, and Mrs. Ramsey could not help exclaiming, Oh, how beautiful!
Starting point is 00:22:17 For the great plateful of blue water was before her, the hoary lighthouse, distant, austere in the midst, and on the right, as far as the eye could see, fading and falling in low, soft bleats, the green sand dunes with the wild flowing grasses on them, which always seemed to be running away into some moon country uninhabited of men. That was the view, she said, stopping, growing grayer-eyed, that how much a-yed, that her husband loved. She paused a moment. But now, she said,
Starting point is 00:22:54 artists had come here. There indeed only a few paces off stood one of them, in Panama hat and yellow boots, seriously, softly, absorbedly, for all that he was watched by ten little boys, with an air of profound contentment on his round red face, gazing, and then, when he had gazed, dipping, imbuing the tip of his brush in some soft mound of green or pink.
Starting point is 00:23:21 Since Mr Pouncefort had been there three years before, all the pictures were like that, she said, green and grey, with lemon-coloured sailing boats and pink women on the beach. But her grandmother's friends, she said, glancing discreetly as they passed, took the greatest pains. First they mixed their own colours, and then they ground them, and then they put damp cloths to keep them moist. So Mr. Tansley supposed she meant him to see that that man's picture was skimpy.
Starting point is 00:23:53 Was that what one said? The colours weren't solid. Was that what one said? Under the influence of that extraordinary emotion which had been growing all the walk, had begun in the garden when he had wanted to take her bag, had increased in the town, when he had wanted to tell her everything about himself, He was coming to see himself, and everything he had ever known gone crooked a little.
Starting point is 00:24:18 It was awfully strange. There he stood in the parlour of the pokey little house where she had taken him, waiting for her, while she went upstairs a moment to see a woman. He heard her quick step above, heard her voice cheerful, then low, looked at the mats, tea caddies, glass shades, waited quite impatiently, looked forward eagerly to the walk home, determined to carry her bag. Then heard her come out, shut a door, so they must keep the windows open and the doors shut,
Starting point is 00:24:53 ask at the house for anything they wanted. She must be talking to a child. When suddenly, in she came, stood for a moment silent, as if she had been pretending up there, and for a moment let herself be now. Stood, quite motionless for a moment, against a picture of Queen Victoria wearing the blue ribbon of the garter. When all at once he realised that it was this, it was this,
Starting point is 00:25:21 she was the most beautiful person he had ever seen. With stars in her eyes and veils in her hair, with sicklemen and wild violets, what nonsense was he thinking? She was fifty at least. She had eight children. stepping through fields of flowers and taking to her breast buds that had broken and lambs that had fallen, with the stars in her eyes and the wind in her hair.
Starting point is 00:25:48 He had hold of her bag. "'Good-bye, Elsie,' she said, and they walked up the street, she holding her parasol erect, and walking as if she expected to meet someone round the corner. While for the first time in his life, Charles Tansley felt an extraordinary pride, A man, digging in a drain, stopped digging and looked at her. Let his arm fall down and looked at her. For the first time in his life, Charles Tansley felt an extraordinary pride, felt the wind and the sickleman and the violets,
Starting point is 00:26:23 for he was walking with a beautiful woman. He had hold of her bag. Chapter 2 No going to the lighthouse, James, he said, as trying in deference to Mrs. Ramsey to soften. his voice into some semblance of geniality at least. "'Odeous little man,' thought Mrs. Ramsey, "'why go on saying that?'
Starting point is 00:26:51 "'Chapter three. "'Perhaps you will wake up and find the sun shining and the birds singing,' she said compassionately, smoothing the little boy's hair. "'For her husband, with his caustics saying that it would not be fine, "'had dashed his spirits she could see.' "'This going to the lighthouse was a passion of his, saw, and then, as if her husband had not said enough, with his caustics saying that it would not be fine to-morrow, this odious little man went and rubbed it in all over again.
Starting point is 00:27:25 "'Perhaps it will be fine to-morrow,' she said, smoothing his hair. All she could do now was to admire the refrigerator, and turn the pages of the store's list, in the hope that she might come upon something like a rake or a mowing-machine, which, with its prongs and its would need the greatest skill and care in cutting out. All these young men parodied her husband, she reflected. He said it would rain. They said it would be a positive tornado. But here, as she turned the page, suddenly her search for the picture of a rake or a mowing
Starting point is 00:28:03 machine was interrupted. The gruff murmur, irregularly broken by the taking out of pipes and the putting in of pipes which had kept on assuring her, though she could not hear what was said, as she sat in the window which opened on the terrace, that the men were happily talking. This sound, which had lasted now half an hour, and had taken its place soothingly in the scale of sounds pressing on top of her, such as the tap of balls upon bats, the sharp sudden bark now and then. How's that? How's that? Of the children playing cricket had ceased. So that the monotonous fall of the waves on the beach, which, for the most part, beat a measured and soothing tattoo to her
Starting point is 00:28:47 thoughts, and seemed consolingly to repeat over and over again as she sat with the children, the words of some old cradle song, murmured by nature, I am guarding you, I am your support. But at other times, suddenly and unexpectedly, especially when her mind raised itself slightly from the task actually in hand had no such kindly meaning, but, like a ghostly roll of drums, remorselessly beat the measure of life, made one think of the destruction of the island and its engulfment in the sea, and warned her whose day had slipped past in one quick doing after another, that it was all ephemeral as a rainbow. This sound, which had been obscured and concealed under the other sounds, suddenly thundered hollow in her ears, and made her look up with an impulse of terror.
Starting point is 00:29:40 They had ceased to talk, that was the explanation. Falling in one second from the tension which had gripped her to the other extreme, which, as if to recoup her for her unnecessary expensive emotion, was cool, amused, and even faintly malicious, she concluded that poor Charles Tansley had been shed. was of little account to her. If her husband required sacrifices, and indeed he did, she cheerfully offered up to him Charles Tansley, who had snubbed her little boy. One moment more, with her head raised, she listened, as if she waited for some habitual sound, some regular mechanical sound. And then, hearing something rhythmical, half said, half chanted, beginning
Starting point is 00:30:32 in the garden, as her husband beat up and down the terrace, something between a croak and a song. She was soothed once more, assured again that all was well, and, looking down at the book on her knee, found the picture of a pocket-knife with six blades, which could only be cut out if James was very careful. Suddenly a loud cry, as of a sleep-walker, half-rous, something about stormed out with shot and shell, sung out with the utmost intensity in her ear, made her turn apprehensively to see if anyone had heard him. Only Lily Briscoe, she was glad to find, and that did not matter. But the sight of the girl's standing on the edge of the lawn painting reminded her. She was supposed to be keeping her head as much in the same position
Starting point is 00:31:24 as possible for Lily's picture. Lily's picture. Mrs. Ramsey's With her little Chinese eyes and her puckered up face, she would never marry. One could not take her painting very seriously. She was an independent little creature, and Mrs. Ramsey liked her for it. So, remembering her promise, she bent her head. End of Section 1. Section 2 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Chapter 4 Indeed, he almost knocked her easel over, coming down upon her with his hands waving, shouting out, boldly we rode and well.
Starting point is 00:32:12 But mercifully he turned sharp and rode off, to die gloriously, she supposed, upon the heights of Balaclava. Never was anybody at once so ridiculous and so alarming. But, so long as he kept like that, waving, shouting, she was safe, he would not stand still and look at her picture. And that was what Lily Briscoe could not have endured. Even while she looked at the mass, at the line, at the colour, at Mrs. Ramsey sitting in the window with James, she kept a feeler on her surroundings, lest someone should creep up, and suddenly she should find her picture looked at.
Starting point is 00:32:55 But now, with all her senses quickened as they were, Looking, straining, till the colour of the wall and the Jack Manor beyond burnt into her eyes. She was aware of someone coming out of the house, coming towards her, but somehow divined from the footfall, William Banks, so that though her brush quivered, she did not, as she would have done had it been Mr. Tansley, Paul Rayleigh, Minter Doyle, or practically anybody else, turn her canvas upon the grass, but let it stand. William Banks stood beside her.
Starting point is 00:33:32 They had rooms in the village, and so, walking in, walking out, parting late on doormats, had said little things about the soup, about the children, about one thing and another, which made them allies. So that when he stood beside her now in his judicial way, he was old enough to be her father too, a botanist, a widower, smelling of soap, very scrupulous and clean, She just stood there. He just stood there. Her shoes were excellent, he observed. They allowed the toes their natural expansion.
Starting point is 00:34:10 Lodging in the same house with her, he had noticed, too, how orderly she was. Up before breakfast and off to paint, he believed, alone. Poor, presumably, and without the complexion or the allurement of Miss Doyle certainly, but with a good sense which made her, in his eyes, superior to that young lady. Now, for example, when Ramsey bore down on them, shouting, gesticulating, Miss Briscoe, he felt certain, understood.
Starting point is 00:34:41 Someone had blundered. Mr. Ramsey glared at them. He glared at them without seeming to see them. That did make them both vaguely uncomfortable. Together they had seen a thing they had not been meant to see. They had encroached upon a privacy. So, Lily thought, it was probably an excuse of his for moving, for getting out of earshot, that made Mr. Banks almost immediately say something about its being chilly,
Starting point is 00:35:10 and suggested taking a stroll. She would come, yes, but it was with difficulty that she took her eyes off her picture. The Jack Manor was bright violet, the walls staring white. She would not have considered it honest to tamper with the bright violet and the staring white since she saw them like that, fashionable though it was, since Mr. Poncefort's visit, to see everything pale, elegant, semi-transparent. Then, beneath colour, there was the shape. She could see it all so clearly, so commandingly, when she looked.
Starting point is 00:35:51 It was when she took her brush in hand that the whole thing changed. It was in that moment's flight between the picture and her canvas that the demons set on her, who often brought her to the verge of tears, and made this passage from conception to work, as dreadful as any down a dark passage for a child. Such she often felt herself, struggling against terrific odds to maintain her courage, to say, but this is what I see, this is what I see. And so to clasp some miserable. remnant of her vision to her breast, which a thousand forces did their best to pluck from her.
Starting point is 00:36:31 And it was then, too, in that chill and windy way, as she began to paint, that there forced themselves upon her other things, her own inadequacy, her insignificance, keeping house for her father off the Brompton Road, and had much ado to control her impulse to fling herself, thank heaven she had always resisted so far, at Mrs. Ramsey's knee, and say to her, but what could one say to her? I'm in love with you. No, that was not true. I'm in love with this all, waving her hand at the hedge, at the house, at the children. It was absurd, it was impossible. So now she laid her brushes neatly in the box side by side and said to William Banks, It suddenly gets cold. The sun seems to give less heat, she said, looking about her, for it was bright
Starting point is 00:37:28 enough. The grass still a soft, deep green, the house starred in its greenery with purple passion flowers, and rook's dropping cool cries from the high blue. But something moved, flashed, turned a silver wing in the air. It was September, after all, the middle of September, and passed six in the evening. So off they strolled down the garden, in the usual direction, past the tennis lawn,
Starting point is 00:37:58 past the pampas grass, to that break in the thick hedge, guarded by red-hot pokers, like braziers of clear burning coal, between which the blue waters of the bay looked bluer than ever. They came there regularly, every evening drawn by some need.
Starting point is 00:38:16 It was as if the water floated off and set sailing thoughts which had grown stagnant on dry land and gave to their bodies even some sort of physical relief. First, the pulse of colour flooded the bay with blue, and the heart expanded with it and the body swam, only the next instant to be checked and chilled by the prickly blackness on the ruffled waves. Then, up behind the ground, black rock, almost every evening spurted irregularly, so that one had to watch for it, and it was a delight when it came, a fountain of white water.
Starting point is 00:38:54 And then, while one waited for that, one watched, on the pale, semi-circular beach, wave after wave, shedding again and again smoothly, a film of Mother of Pearl. They both smiled standing there. They both felt a common hilarity, excited by the moving waves, and then by the swift-cutting race of a sailing-boat, which, having sliced a curve in the bay, stopped, shivered, let its sails drop down. And then, with a natural instinct to complete the picture, after the swift movement, both of them looked at the dunes far away, and instead of merriment felt come over them
Starting point is 00:39:38 some sadness, because the thing was completed partly, and partly because distant views seemed to outlast by a million years, Lily thought, the gazer, and to be communing already with a sky which beholds an earth entirely at rest. Looking at the far sand-hills, William Banks thought of Ramsey, thought of a road in West Moreland, thought of Ramsey striding along a road by himself, hung round with that solitude, which seemed to be his natural air. But this was suddenly interrupted. William Banks remembered,
Starting point is 00:40:14 and this must refer to some actual incident, by a hen, straddling her wings out in protection of a covey of little chicks, upon which, Ramsey, stopping, pointed his stick and said, Pretty pretty. An odd illumination into his heart, Banks had thought it, which showed his simplicity,
Starting point is 00:40:35 his sympathy with humble things, But it seemed to him as if their friendship had ceased there on that stretch of road. After that, Ramsey had married. After that, what with one thing and another, the pulp had gone out of their friendship. Whose fault it was he could not say? Only, after a time, repetition had taken the place of newness. It was to repeat that they met. But in this dumb colloquy with the sand dunes he maintained that his affection for Ramsey
Starting point is 00:41:10 had in no way diminished, but there, like the body of a young man laid up in peat for a century, with the red fresh on his lips, was his friendship, in its acuteness and reality, laid up across the bay among the sand-hills. He was anxious for the sake of this friendship, and perhaps too in order to clear himself in his own mind from the imputation of having dried and shrunk. For Ramsey lived in a welter of children, whereas Banks was childless and a widower. He was anxious that Lily Briscoe should not disparage Ramsey, a great man in his own way, yet should understand how things stood between them. Begun long years ago, their friendship had petered out on a Westmoreland road,
Starting point is 00:41:58 where the hen spread her wings before her chicks. after which Ramsey had married, and their paths lying different ways, there had been, certainly for no one's fault, some tendency, when they met, to repeat. Yes, that was it. He finished. He turned from the view. And, turning to walk back the other way, up the drive, Mr. Banks was alive to things which would not have struck him, had not those sandhills revealed to him the body.
Starting point is 00:42:31 of his friendship, lying with the red on its lips laid up in peat. For instance, Cam, the little girl, Ramsey's youngest daughter. She was picking sweet Alice on the bank. She was wild and fierce. She would not, give a flower to the gentleman, as the nursemaid told her. No, no, no, she would not. She clenched her fist. She stamped. And Mr. Banks felt aged and saddened, and somehow put into the wrong by her about his friendship. He must have dried and shrunk. The Ramses were not rich, and it was a wonder how they managed to contrive it all. Eight children! To feed eight children on philosophy! Here was another of them, Jasper this time, strolling past, to have a shot at a bird, he said, nonchalantly, swinging Lily's hand like a pump handle as he
Starting point is 00:43:29 passed, which caused Mr. Banks to say, bitterly, how she was a favourite. There was education now to be considered. True, Mrs. Ramsey had something of her own, perhaps, let alone the daily wear and tear of shoes and stockings which those great fellows, all well-grown, angular, ruthless youngsters must require. As for being sure which was which, or in what order they came, that was beyond him. He called them privately after the kings and queens of England. Cam the wicked, James the ruthless, Andrew the just, Prue the fair.
Starting point is 00:44:10 For Prue would have beauty, he thought. How could she help it? And Andrew brains. While he walked up the drive, and Lily Briscoe said yes and no, and capped his comments, for she was in love with them all, in love with this world. He weighed Ramsey's case, commiserated him. envied him, as if he had seen him divest himself of all those glories of isolation and austerity which crowned him in youth, to cumber himself definitely with fluttering wings and clucking domesticities. They gave him something, William Banks acknowledged that.
Starting point is 00:44:47 It would have been pleasant if Cam had stuck a flower in his coat, or clambered over his shoulder, as over her father's, to look at a picture of Vesuvius in eruption. But they had also, His old friends could not but feel, destroyed something. What would a stranger think now? What did this Lily Brisco think? Could one help noticing that habits grew on him?
Starting point is 00:45:14 Eccentricities, weaknesses, perhaps. It was astonishing that a man of his intellect could stoop so low as he did, but that was too harsh a phrase, could depend so much as he did upon people's praise. Oh, but... said Lily, think of his work. Whenever she thought of his work,
Starting point is 00:45:35 she always saw clearly before her a large kitchen table. It was Andrew's doing. She asked him what his father's books were about. Subject and object and the nature of reality, Andrew had said. And when she said, heavens, she had no idea what that meant. Think of a kitchen table then, he told her, when you're not there.
Starting point is 00:45:59 So now she always saw, when she thought of Mr. Ramsey's work, a scrubbed kitchen table. It lodged now in the fork of a pear tree, for they had reached the orchard. And with a painful effort of concentration she focused her mind, not upon the silver-bossed bark of the tree or upon its fish-shaped leaves, but upon a phantom kitchen table, one of those scrubbed board tables, grained and knotted, whose virtue seemed to have been laid bare by y'yote, of muscular integrity, which stuck there its four legs in air. Naturally, if one's days were passed in this seeing of angular essences, this reducing of lovely
Starting point is 00:46:41 evenings, with all their flamingo clouds and blue and silver, to a white deal, four-legged table, and it was a mark of the finest mind to do so, naturally one could not be judged like an ordinary person. Mr. Banks liked her, forbidding him, think of his work. He had thought of it, often and often. Times without number he had said, Ramsey is one of those men who do their best work before they are forty. He had made a definite contribution to philosophy in one little book
Starting point is 00:47:15 when he was only five and twenty. What came after was more or less amplification, repetition. But the number of men who make a definite contribution to anything whatsoever is very small. he said, pausing by the pear tree, well brushed, scrupulously exact, exquisitely judicial. Suddenly, as if the movement of his hand had released it, the load of her accumulated impressions of him tilted up, and down poured in a ponderous avalanche all she felt about him. That was one sensation. Then uprose in a fume the essence of his being.
Starting point is 00:47:54 That was another. She felt herself transfixed by the intensity of her perception. It was his severity, his goodness. I respect you, she addressed silently him in person, in every atom. You were not vain. You were entirely impersonal. You were finer than Mr. Ramsey. You are the finest human being that I know.
Starting point is 00:48:18 You have neither wife nor child. Without any sexual feeling, she longed to cherish that loneliness. You live for science." Involuntarily, sections of potatoes rose before her eyes. Praise would be an insult to you, generous, pure-hearted, heroic man. But simultaneously she remembered how he had brought a valet all the way up here, objected to dogs on chairs, would prose for hours, until Mr. Ramsey slammed out of the room, about salt in vegetables and of the iniquity of English cooks.
Starting point is 00:48:53 How then did it work out all this? How did one judge people? Think of them? How did one add up this and that and conclude that it was liking one felt or disliking? And to those words what meaning attached after all? Standing now, apparently transfixed by the pear tree, impressions poured in upon her of those two men,
Starting point is 00:49:19 and to follow her thought was like following a voice which speaks too quickly to be taken down by one's pencil, and the voice was her own voice, saying without prompting, undeniable, everlasting, contradictory things, so that even the fissures and humps on the bark of the pear tree were irrevocably fixed there for eternity. You have greatness, she continued, but Mr. Ramsey has none of it. He is petty, selfish, vain, egotistical. He is spoiled. He is a tyrant.
Starting point is 00:49:51 He wears Mrs. Ramsey. to death. But he has what you, she addressed Mr. Banks, have not, a fiery unworldliness. He knows nothing about trifles. He loves dogs and his children. He has eight. Mr. Banks has none. Did he not come down in two coats the other night and let Mrs. Ramsey trim his hair into a pudding basin? All of this danced up and down like a company of gnats, each separate but all marvelously controlled in an invisible elastic net. Darned up and down in Lillie's mind, in and about the branches of the pear tree, where still hung in effigy the scrubbed kitchen table, symbol of her profound respect for Mr. Ramsey's
Starting point is 00:50:37 mind, until her thought, which had spun quicker and quicker, exploded of its own intensity, she felt released. A shot went off close at hand, and there came, flying from its fragments, Frightened, effusive, tumultuous, a flock of starlings. Jasper, said Mr. Banks. They turned the way the starlings flew over the terrace. Following the scatter of swift-flying birds in the sky, they stepped through the gap in the high hedge, straight into Mr. Ramsey, who boomed tragically at them.
Starting point is 00:51:15 Someone had blundered. His eyes, glazed with emotion, defiant with tragic intent, met theirs for a second, and trembled on the verge of recognition. But then, raising his hand, halfway to his face as if to avert, to brush off, in an agony of peevish shame, their normal gaze, as if he begged them to withhold for a moment what he knew to be inevitable, as if he impressed upon them his own childlike resentment of interruption, yet even in the moment of discovery was not to be routed utterly, but was determined to to hold fast as something of this delicious emotion, this impure rhapsody of which he was ashamed,
Starting point is 00:51:57 but in which he revelled. He turned abruptly, slammed his private door on them, and Lily Briscoe and Mr. Banks, looking uneasily up into the sky, observed that the flock of starlings which Jasper had routed with his gun had settled on the tops of the elm trees. Chapter 5. And even if it isn't fine to-morrow, said Mrs. Ramsey, Raising her eyes to glance at William Banks and Lily Briscoe as they passed. It will be another day. And now, she said, thinking that Lily's charm was her Chinese eyes, a slant in her white, puckered little face,
Starting point is 00:52:39 but it would take a clever man to see it. And now stand up and let me measure your leg, for they might go to the lighthouse after all, and she must see if the stocking did not need to be an inch or two longer in the leg. Smiling, for it was an admirable idea that had flashed upon her this very second, William and Lily should marry. She took the heather mixture stocking with its criss-cross of steel needles at the mouth of it, and measured it against James's leg.
Starting point is 00:53:07 "'My dear, stand still,' she said, for in his jealousy, not liking to serve as measuring block for the lighthouse-keeper's little boy, James fidgeted purposely. And if he did that, how could she see? Was it too long? Was it too short? she asked. She looked up. What demon possessed him, her youngest, her cherished, and saw the room, saw the chairs, thought them fearfully shabby. Their entrails, as Andrew said the other day, were all over the floor. But then what was the point, she asked, of buying good chairs to let them spoil up here all through the winter, when the house, with only one old woman to see to it, positively dripped with wet? Never mind.
Starting point is 00:53:52 The rent was precisely Tuppence-Hapney. The children loved it. It did her husband good to be three thousand, or if she must be accurate, three hundred miles from his libraries and his lectures and his disciples, and there was room for visitors. Mats, camp beds, crazy ghosts of chairs and tables whose London life of service was done. They did well enough here, and a photograph or two, and books. Books, she thought, grew of themselves. She never had time to read them.
Starting point is 00:54:26 Alas, even the books that had been given her and inscribed by the hand of the poet himself, for her whose wishes must be obeyed, the happier Helen of our days. Disgraceful to say she had never read them. And crumb on the mind and baits on the savage customs of Polynesia. My dear, stand still, she said. neither one of those could one send to the lighthouse. At a certain moment, she supposed, the house would become so shabby that something must be done.
Starting point is 00:54:59 If they could be taught to wipe their feet and not bring the beach in with them, that would be something. Crabs, she had to allow, if Andrew really wished to dissect them, or if Jasper believed that one could make soup from seaweed, one could not prevent it, or roses objects, shells, reeds, stones, for they were gifted her children, but all in quite different ways.
Starting point is 00:55:24 And the result of it was, she sighed, taking in the whole room from floor to ceiling, as she held the stocking against James's leg. The things got shabbier and got shabbier summer after summer. The mat was fading, the wallpaper was flapping. You couldn't tell any more that those were roses on it. Still, if every door in a house is left perpetually over, and no lockmaker in the whole of Scotland can mend a bolt, things must spoil. What was the use of flinging a green cashmere shawl over the edge of a picture frame? In two weeks it would be the colour of pea soup. But it was the doors that annoyed her. Every door was left open.
Starting point is 00:56:08 She listened. The drawing-room door was open. The hall door was open. It sounded as if the bedroom doors were open, and certainly the window on the landing was open, for that she had opened herself. That windows should be open and doors shut. Simple as it was, could none of them remember it. She would go into the maid's bedrooms at night and find them sealed like ovens,
Starting point is 00:56:33 except for Marie's, the Swiss girl, who would rather go without a bath than without fresh air. But then, at home, she had said, The mountains are so beautiful. She had said that last night. looking out of the window with tears in her eyes. The mountains are so beautiful. Her father was dying there, Mrs. Ramsey knew. He was leaving them fatherless.
Starting point is 00:56:59 Scalding and demonstrating how to make a bed, how to open a window, with hands that shut and spread like a Frenchwoman's, all had folded itself quietly about her when the girl spoke, as, after a flight through the sunshine, the wings of a bird fold themselves quietly, and the blue of its plumage changes from bright steel to soft purple. She had stood there silent, for there was nothing to be said.
Starting point is 00:57:25 He had cancer of the throat. At the recollection, how she had stood there, how the girl had said, At home the mountains are so beautiful. And there was no hope, no hope whatever. She had a spasm of irritation, and speaking sharply, said to James, "'Stand still, don't be tiresome!'
Starting point is 00:57:47 "'So that he knew instantly that her severity was real, "'and straightened his leg and she measured it. "'The stocking was too short by half an inch at least, "'making allowance for the fact that Solly's little boy "'would be less well-grown than James. "'It's too short,' she said, "'ever so much too short.' "'Never did anybody look so sad.
Starting point is 00:58:11 "'Bitter and black, halfway down, the darkness, in the shaft which ran from the sunlight to the depths. Maybe a tear formed, a tear fell, the waters swayed this way and that, received it and were at rest. Never did anybody look so sad. But was it nothing but looks, people said. What was there behind it, her beauty and splendour? Had he blown his brains out, they asked, had he died the week before they were married? Some other, earlier life. lover, of whom rumours reached one. Or was there nothing, nothing but an incomparable beauty which she lived behind, and could do nothing to disturb? For easily though she might have said
Starting point is 00:58:57 at some moment of intimacy, when stories of great passion, of love foiled, of ambition thwarted, came her way, how she too had known or felt or been through it herself, she never spoke. She was silent always. She knew there. She knew without having learned. Her simplicity fathomed what clever people falsified. Her singleness of mind made her drop plum like a stone, a light exact as a bird, gave her, naturally, this swoop and fall of the spirit upon truth which delighted, eased, sustained, falsely perhaps. Nature has but little clay, said Mr. Banks once, much moved by her voice on the telephone,
Starting point is 00:59:43 though she was only telling him a fact about a train, like that of which she moulded you. He saw her at the end of the line, Greek, blue-eyed, straight-nosed, how incongruous it seemed to be telephoning to a woman like that. The Grace's assembling seemed to have joined hands in meadows of Asphodel to compose that face. Yes, he would catch the 10.30 at Euston.
Starting point is 01:00:09 But she's no more aware of her beauty than a child, said Mr. Banks, replacing the receiver and crossing the room to see what progress the workmen were making with a hotel which they were building at the back of his house. And he thought of Mrs. Ramsey as he looked at that stir among the unfinished walls. For always, he thought, there was something incongruous to be worked into the harmony of her face. She clapped a deer-stalker's hat on her head. She ran across the garden in galoshes to snatch a child from mischief. So that if it was her beauty merely that one thought of, one must remember the quivering thing, the living thing. They were carrying bricks up a little plank as he watched them, and work it into the
Starting point is 01:00:53 picture. Or, if one thought of her simply as a woman, one must endow her with some freak of idiosyncrasy. She did not like admiration, or suppose some latent desire to doff her form of royalty, as if her beauty bored her and all that men say of beauty. And she wanted only to be like other people, insignificant. He did not know, he did not know, he must go to his work. Knitting her reddish-brown, hairy stocking, with her head outlined absurdly by the gilt frame, the green shawl which she had tossed over the edge of the frame, and the authenticated masterpiece by Michelangelo. Mrs. Ramsey smoothed out what had been harsh in her manner a moment before, raised his head and kissed her little boy on the forehead.
Starting point is 01:01:42 Let us find another picture to cut out, she said. End of Section 2. Section 3 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Libravox recording is in the public domain. Chapter 6. But what had happened? Someone had blundered. Starting from her musing, she gave meaning to
Starting point is 01:02:08 words which she had held meaningless in her mind for a long stretch of time. Someone had blundered. Fixing her short-sighted eyes upon her husband, who was now bearing down upon her, she gazed steadily until his closeness revealed to her. The jingle mated itself in her head, that something had happened, someone had blundered. But she could not, for the life of her, think what? He shivered, he quivered, All his vanity, all his satisfaction in his own splendour, riding fell as a thunderbolt, fierce as a hawk at the head of his men through the valley of death, had been shattered, destroyed. Stormed at by shot and shell, boldly rewrote and well, flashed through the valley of death, volleied and thundered, straight into Lily Briscoe and William Banks.
Starting point is 01:03:02 He quivered, he shivered. Not for the world would she have. have spoken to him, realising from the familiar signs, his eyes averted and some curious gathering together of his person, as if he wrapped himself about and needed privacy into which to regain his equilibrium, that he was outraged and anguished. She stroked James's head, she transferred to him what she felt for her husband, and, as she watched him chalk yellow the white dress shirt of a gentleman in the Army and Navy store's catalogue, thought what a delight it would be to her should he turn out a great artist,
Starting point is 01:03:41 and why should he not? He had a splendid forehead. Then, looking up, as her husband passed her once more, she was relieved to find that the ruin was veiled, domesticity triumphed, custom crooned its soothing rhythm, so that when stopping deliberately, as his turn came round again, at the window he bent quizzically and whimsically to tickle James's bare calf with a sprig of something, She twitted him for having dispatched that poor young man, Charles Tansley.
Starting point is 01:04:12 Tansley had had to go in and write his dissertation, he said. James will have to write his dissertation one of these days, he added ironically, flicking his sprig. Hating his father, James brushed away the tickling spray, with which, in a manner peculiar to him, compound of severity and humour, he teased his youngest son's bare leg. She was trying to get these tiresome stockings finished to send to Soley's little boy tomorrow, said Mrs. Ramsey. There wasn't the slightest possible chance that they could go to the lighthouse tomorrow, Mr. Ramsey snapped out irascibly.
Starting point is 01:04:49 How did he know, she asked, the wind often changed? The extraordinary irrationality of her remark, the folly of women's minds, enraged him. He had ridden through the valley of death, been shattered, and shivered, and now she flew in the face of facts, made his children hope what was utterly out of the question, in effect told lies. He stamped his foot on the stone step. Damn you, he said. But what had she said, simply that it might be fine tomorrow? So it might. Not with the barometer falling and the wind due west. To pursue truth with such astonishing lack of consideration.
Starting point is 01:05:34 for other people's feelings, to rend the thin veils of civilisation so wantonly, so brutally, was to her so horrible an outrage of human decency that, without replying, dazed and blinded, she bent her head as if to let the pelt of jagged hail, the drench of dirty water, bespatter her, unrebuked. There was nothing to be said. He stood by her in silence. Very humbly, at length, He said that he would step over and ask the Coast Guards if she liked. There was nobody whom she reverenced as she reverenced him. She was quite ready to take his word for it, she said. Only then they need not cut sandwiches, that was all.
Starting point is 01:06:19 They came to her naturally, since she was a woman, all day long with this and that, one wanting this, another that. The children were growing up. She often felt she was nothing but a sponge sopped full of human emotions. Then he said, damn you. He said, it must rain. He said it won't rain. And instantly a heaven of security opened before her.
Starting point is 01:06:44 There was nobody she reverenced more. She was not good enough to tie his shoelaces, she felt. Already ashamed of that petulance, of that gesticulation of the hands when charging at the head of his troops, Mr. Ramsey rather sheepishly prodded his son's bare legs once more, and then, as if he had her leave for it, with a movement which oddly reminded his wife of the great sea-lion at the zoo tumbling backwards after swallowing his fish, and walloping off so that the water in the tank washes from side to side. He dived into the evening air, which, already thinner, was taking the substance from leaves and hedges, but, as if by return,
Starting point is 01:07:27 restoring to roses and pinks a lustre which they had not had by day. Someone had blundered, he said again, striding off, up and down the terrace. But how extraordinarily his note had changed. It was like the cuckoo. In June he gets out of tune, as if he were trying over, tentatively seeking some phrase for a new mood, and having only this at hand, used it, cracked though it was. But it sounded ridiculous. Someone had blundered.
Starting point is 01:08:00 said like that, almost as a question, without any conviction, melodiously. Mrs. Ramsey could not help smiling, and soon, sure enough, walking up and down, he hummed it, dropped it, fell silent. He was safe, he was restored to his privacy. He stopped to light his pipe, looked once at his wife and son in the window, and, as one raises one's eyes from a page in an expression, breastrain, and sees a farm, a tree, a cluster of cottages as an illustration, a confirmation of something on the printed page, to which one returns, fortified and satisfied. So, without his distinguishing either his son or his wife, the sight of them fortified him
Starting point is 01:08:49 and satisfied him, and consecrated his effort to arrive at a perfectly clear understanding of the problem, which now engaged the energies of his splendid mind. It was a splendid mind, for if thought is like the keyboard of a piano, divided into so many notes, or, like the alphabet is ranged in 26 letters all in order, then his splendid mind had no sort of difficulty in running over those letters one by one, firmly and accurately, until it had reached, say, the letter Q. He reached Q. Very few people in the whole of England ever reach Q.
Starting point is 01:09:30 Here, stopping for one moment by the stone urn which held the geraniums, he saw, but now far, far away, like children picking up shells, divinely innocent and occupied with little trifles at their feet, and somehow entirely defenceless against a doom which he perceived, his wife and son together in the window. They needed his protection. He gave it them. But after Q, what comes next?
Starting point is 01:10:00 After Q there are a number of letters, the last of which is scarcely visible to mortal eyes, but glimmers red in the distance. Z is only reached once by one man in a generation. Still, if he could reach R, it would be something. Here at least was Q. He dug his heels in at Q. Q he was sure of. he could demonstrate. If Q is Q, R. Here he knocked his pipe out, with two or three resonant
Starting point is 01:10:33 taps on the handle of the urn and proceeded, then R? He braced himself. He clenched himself. Qualities that would have saved a ship's company exposed on a broiling sea with six biscuits and a flask of water, endurance and justice, foresight, devourmet, devour. motion, skill came to his help. Ar as then, what is R? A shudder, like the leathern eyelid of a lizard, flickered over the intensity of his gaze and obscured the letter R. In that flash of darkness he heard people saying he was a failure, that R was beyond him.
Starting point is 01:11:17 He would never reach R. On to R once more, R. that, in a desolate expedition across the icy solitudes of the polar region, would have made him the leader, the guide, the counsellor, whose temper, neither sanguine nor despondent, surveys with equanimity what is to be and faces it, came to his help again. Ah! The lizard's eye flickered once more, the veins on his forehead bulged. The geranium in the urn became startlingly visible, and, displayed among its leaves, he could see without wishing it, that old, that obvious distinction between the two classes of men,
Starting point is 01:12:00 on the one hand the steady goers of superhuman strength, who, plodding and persevering, repeat the whole alphabet in order, 26 letters in all from start to finish. On the other, the gifted, the inspired, who, miraculously, lump all the letters together in one flash, the way of genius. He had not genius. He laid no claim to that. But he had, or might have had, the power to repeat every letter of the alphabet
Starting point is 01:12:33 from A to Z accurately in order. Meanwhile, he stuck at Q. On then, on to R. Feelings that would not have disgraced a leader, who, now that the snow has begun to fall and the mountaintop is covered in mist, knows that he must lay himself down and die before morning comes, stole upon him, pailing the colour of his eyes, giving him, even in the two minutes of his turn on the terrace, the bleached
Starting point is 01:13:03 look of withered old age. Yet he would not die lying down. He would find some crag of rock, and there his eyes fixed on the storm, trying to the end to pierce the darkness, he would die standing. He would never reach R. He stood stock-still by the urn, with the geranium flowing over it. How many men in a thousand million, he asked himself, reach Zed after all? Surely the leader of a forlorn hope may ask himself that, and answer, without treachery to the expedition behind him, one, perhaps. One in a generation.
Starting point is 01:13:46 Is he to be blamed then if he is not that one, provided he has to toilers? honestly, given to the best of his power, and till he has no more left to give. And his fame lasts how long? It is permissible even for a dying hero to think before he dies how men will speak of him hereafter. His fame lasts perhaps two thousand years. And what are two thousand years? asked Mr. Ramsey ironically, staring at the hedge. What indeed if you look from a mountain-top down the long wastes of the ages, the very stone one kicks with one's boot will outlast Shakespeare. His own little light would shine, not very brightly, for a year or two, and would then be merged in some bigger light, and that in a bigger still. He looked into the hedge, into the intricacy of the
Starting point is 01:14:41 twigs. Who then could blame the leader of that forlorn party, which, after all, has climbed high enough to see the waste of the years and the perishing of the stars, if, before death, stiffens his limbs beyond the power of movement, he does, a little consciously, raise his numbed fingers to his brow and square his shoulders, so that when the search party comes they will find him dead at his post, the fine figure of a soldier. Mr. Ramsey squared his shoulders and stood very upright by the urn. Who shall blame him, if, so standing for a moment, he, he, and he, and he, he wastesy, he, and, He dwells upon fame, upon search parties, upon cairns raised by grateful followers over
Starting point is 01:15:26 his bones. Finally, who shall blame the leader of the doomed expedition, if, having adventured to the uttermost, and used his strength wholly to the last ounce, and fallen asleep not much caring if he wakes or not? He now perceives by some pricking in his toes that he lives, and does not, on the whole, object to live, but requires sympathy and whiskey, and someone to tell the story of his suffering to at once. Who shall blame him? Who will not secretly rejoice when the hero puts his armour off, and halts by the window and gazes at his wife and son? Who, very distant at first,
Starting point is 01:16:06 gradually come closer and closer, till lips and book and head are clearly before him, though still lovely and unfamiliar from the intensity of his isolation, and the waste of ages and the perishing of the stars, and finally, putting his pipe in his pocket, and bending his magnificent head before her, who will blame him if he does homage to the beauty of the world? Chapter 7. But his son hated him. He hated him for coming up to them, for stopping and looking down on them. He hated him for interrupting them. He hated him for the exultation and sublimity of his gestures, for the magnificence of his head, for his exactingness and egotism, for there he stood, commanding them to attend to him. But most of all he hated the twang and twitter of his
Starting point is 01:17:02 father's emotion, which, vibrating round them, disturbed the perfect simplicity and good sense of his relations with his mother. By looking fixedly at the page, he hoped to make him move on, By pointing his finger at a word, he hoped to recall his mother's attention, which, he knew angrily, wavered instantly his father stopped. But no, nothing would make Mr. Ramsey move on. There he stood, demanding sympathy. Mrs. Ramsey, who had been sitting loosely, folding her son in her arm, braced herself, and, half-turning, seemed to raise herself with an effort, and at once to point her, pour erect into the air, a rain of energy, a column of spray, looking at the same time animated and alive, as if all her energies were being fused into force, burning and illuminating, quietly though she sat, taking up her stocking again, and into this delicious fecundity,
Starting point is 01:18:04 this fountain and spray of life, the fatal sterility of the male plunged itself, like a beak of brass, barren and bear. He wanted sympathy. He was a failure, he said. Mrs. Ramsey flashed her needles. Mr. Ramsey repeated, never taking his eyes from her face, that he was a failure. She blew the words back at him. Charles Tansley, she said.
Starting point is 01:18:32 But he must have more than that. It was sympathy he wanted, to be assured of his genius, first of all, and then to be taken within the circle of life, warmed and soothed, to have his senses restored to him, his barrenness made fertile, and all the rooms of the house made full of life, the drawing-room, behind the drawing-room the kitchen, the bedrooms, and beyond them the nurseries, they must be furnished, they must be filled with life. Charles Tansley thought him the greatest metaphysician of the time, she said.
Starting point is 01:19:09 But he must have more than that. He must have sympathy. He must be assured that he too lived in the heart of life, was needed, not only here, but all over the world. Flashing her needles, confident, upright, she created drawing-room and kitchen, set them all the glow, bade him take his ease there, go in and out, enjoy himself. She laughed, she knitted. Standing between her knees, very stiff, James felt all her. strength flaring up to be drunk and quenched by the beak of brass, the arrored scimitar
Starting point is 01:19:46 of the male, which smote mercilessly again and again, demanding sympathy. He was a failure, he repeated. Well, look then, feel then. Flashing her needles, glancing round about her, out of the window, into the room, at James himself, she assured him, beyond a shadow of a doubt, by her laugh, her poise, her competence, as a nurse carrying a light across a dark room assures a fractious child, that it was real, the house was full, the garden blowing. If he put implicit faith in her, nothing should hurt him, however deep he buried himself or climbed high, not for a second
Starting point is 01:20:31 should he find himself without her. So boasting of her capacity to surround and protect, There was scarcely a shell of herself left for her to know herself by, all was so lavished and spent, and James, as he stood stiff between her knees, felt her rise in a rosy-flowered fruit tree, laid with leaves and dancing boughs, into which the beak of brass, the arid scimitar of his father, the egotistical man, plunged and smote, demanding sympathy. filled with her words, like a child who drops off satisfied, he said, at last, looking at her with humble gratitude, restored, renewed, that he would take a turn, he would watch the children playing cricket. He went. Immediately Mrs. Ramsey seemed to fold herself together, one
Starting point is 01:21:26 petal closed in another, and the whole fabric fell in exhaustion upon itself, so that she had only strength enough to move her finger, an exquisite abandonment to exhaustion, across the page of Grimm's fairy story, while there throbbed through her, like a pulse in spring which has expanded to its full width, and now gently ceases to beat, the rapture of successful creation. Every throb of this pulse seemed, as he walked away, to enclose her and her husband, and to give to each that solace which two different notes, one high, one low, struck together, seemed to give each other as they combine. Yet as the resonance died and she turned to the fairy tale again, Mrs. Ramsey felt not only exhausted in body. Afterwards, not at the time, she always felt this, but also their time. tinged her physical fatigue some faintly disagreeable sensation with another origin.
Starting point is 01:22:26 Not that, as she read aloud the story of the fisherman's wife, she knew precisely what it came from, nor did she let herself put into words her dissatisfaction when she realized, at the turn of the page, when she stopped and heard dully, ominously, a wave-fall, how it came from this. She did not like, even for a second, to feel finer than her husband. and further could not bear not being entirely sure when she spoke to him of the truth of what she said. Universities and people wanting him, lectures and books and their being of the highest importance, all that she did not doubt for a moment. But it was their relation, and his coming to her like that, openly,
Starting point is 01:23:13 so that anyone could see, that discomposed her. For then people said he depended on her, when they must know that a woman. of the two he was infinitely the more important, and what she gave the world, in comparison with what he gave, negligible. But then again it was the other thing, too, not being able to tell him the truth, being afraid, for instance, about the greenhouse roof and the expense it would be, fifty pounds perhaps, to mend it, and then about his books, to be afraid that he might guess, what she a little suspected, that his last book was not quite his best book. She gathered that from William Banks, and then to hide small daily things, and the children seeing
Starting point is 01:23:57 it, and the burden it laid on them, all this diminished the entire joy, the pure joy of the two notes sounding together, and let the sound die on her ear now with a dismal flatness. A shadow was on the page, she looked up. It was Augustus Carmichael shuffling past, precisely now, at the very moment when it was painful to be reminded of the inadequacy of human relationships, that the most perfect was flawed and could not bear the examination which, loving her husband, with her instinct for truth, she turned upon it, when it was painful to feel herself convicted of unworthiness and impeded in her proper function by these lies, these exaggerations, It was at this moment when she was fretted thus ignobly in the wake of her exultation
Starting point is 01:24:48 that Mr Carmichael shuffled past, in his yellow slippers, and some demon in her made it necessary for her to call out as he passed. Going indoors, Mr. Carmichael. Chapter 8 He said nothing. He took opium. The children said he had stained his beard yellow with it. Perhaps.
Starting point is 01:25:14 What was obvious? to her was that the poor man was unhappy, came to them every year as an escape, and yet every year she felt the same thing, he did not trust her. She said, I'm going to the town, shall I get you stamps, paper, tobacco, and she felt him wince. He did not trust her. It was his wife's doing. She remembered that iniquity of his wife's towards him, which had made her turned a steel and adamant there, in the horrible little room in St. John's Wood, when, with her own eyes, she had seen that odious woman turn him out of the house. He was unkempt. He dropped things on his coat. He had the tiresomeness of an old man with nothing in the world
Starting point is 01:26:03 to do, and she turned him out of the room. She said, in her odious way, Now, Mrs. Ramsey and I want to have a little talk together. And Mrs. Ramsey could see, as if before her eyes, the innumerable miseries of his life. Had he money enough to buy tobacco? Did he have to ask her for it? Half a crown, eighteen pence. Oh, she could not bear to think of the little indignities she made him suffer. And always now.
Starting point is 01:26:35 Why, she could not guess, except that it came probably from that one. woman somehow. He shrank from her. He never told her anything. But what more could she have done? There was a sunny room given up to him. The children were good to him. Never did she show a sign of not wanting him. She went out of her way indeed to be friendly. Do you want stamps? Do you want tobacco? Here's a book you might like, and so on. And after all, after all, here, insensibly she, drew herself together, physically, the sense of her own beauty becoming, as it did so seldom, present to her. After all, she had not generally any difficulty in making people like her. For instance, George Manning, Mr. Wallace, famous as they were, they would come to her of an evening,
Starting point is 01:27:29 quietly, and talk alone over her fire. She bore about with her, she could not help knowing it, the torch of her beauty. She carried it erect into any room that she entered, and after all, fail it as she might, and shrink from the monotony of bearing that it imposed on her, her beauty was apparent. She had been admired, she had been loved. She had entered rooms where mourners sat. Tears had flown in her presence. Men and women, too, letting go to the multiplicity of things, had allowed themselves with
Starting point is 01:28:06 her the relief of simplicity. It injured her that he should shrink. It hurt her. And yet not cleanly, not rightly. That was what she minded, coming as it did on top of her discontent with her husband. The sense she had now, when Mr. Carmichael shuffled past, just nodding to her question, with a book beneath his arm, in his yellow slippers, that she was suspected, and that all this desire of hers to give, to help, was vanity.
Starting point is 01:28:38 For her own self-satisfaction was it that she wished so instinctively to help, to give, that people might say of her, Oh, Mrs. Ramsey, dear Mrs. Ramsey, of course, and need her and send for her and admire her. Was it not secretly this that she wanted? And therefore, when Mr. Carmichael shrank away from her, as he did at this moment, making off to some corner where he did acrostics endlessly. She did not feel merely snubbed back in her instinct, but made aware of the pettiness of some part of her, and of human relations, how flawed they are, how despicable, how self-seeking at their best. Shabby and worn out, and not presumably, her cheeks were hollow, her hair was white, any longer a sight that
Starting point is 01:29:30 filled the eyes with joy. She had better devote her mind to the story of her. the fisherman and his wife, and so pacify that bundle of sensitiveness. None of her children was as sensitive as he was, her son James. The man's heart grew heavy, she read aloud, and he would not go. He said to himself, it is not right, and yet he went. And when he came to the sea the water was quite purple and dark blue, and grey and thick, and no longer so green and yellow, but it was still quiet. And he stood there and said, Mrs. Ramsey could have wished that her husband had not
Starting point is 01:30:12 chosen that moment to stop. Why had he not gone, as he said, to watch the children playing cricket? But he did not speak. He looked, he nodded, he approved, he went on. He slipped, seeing before him that hedge which had, over and over again, rounded some pause, signified some conclusion, Seeing his wife and child, seeing again the urns with the trailing of red geraniums, which had so often decorated processes of thought, and bore up, written among their leaves, as if they were scraps of paper on which one scribbles notes in the rush of reading. He slipped, seeing all this, smoothly into speculation suggested by an article in the Times, about the number of Americans who visit Shakespeare's house every year.
Starting point is 01:31:02 If Shakespeare had never existed, he had. he asked, would the world have differed much from what it is today? Does the progress of civilization depend upon great men? Is the lot of the average human being better now than in the time of the pharaohs? Is the lot of the average human being, however, he asked himself, the criterion by which we judge the measure of civilization? Possibly not. Possibly the greatest good requires the existence of a slave class. The liftman in the tube is an eternal necessity. The thought was distasteful to him. He tossed his head. To avoid it, he would find some way of snubbing the predominance of the arts. He would argue that the world exists for the average human being,
Starting point is 01:31:51 that the art semilia decoration imposed on the top of human life, they do not express it. Nor is Shakespeare unnecessary to it. Not knowing precisely why it was that he wanted to disparage Shakespeare, and come to the rescue of the man who stands eternally in the door of the lift, he picked a leaf sharply from the hedge. All this would have to be dished up for the young men at Cardiff next month, he thought. Here on his terrace he was merely foraging and picnicking. He threw away the leaf that he had picked so peevishly, like a man who reaches from his horse to pick a bunch of roses, or stuffs his pockets with nuts as he ambles at his ease through the lanes and fields of a country known to him from boyhood. It was all familiar, this turning, that style, that cut across the fields.
Starting point is 01:32:44 Hours he would spend thus, with his pipe of an evening, thinking up and down and in and out of the old familiar lanes and commons, which were all stuck about with the history of that campaign there, the life of this statesman here, with poems and with anecdotes, with figures too, this thinker, that soldier. All very brisk and clear, but at length the lane, the field, the common, the fruitful nut-tree and the flowering hedge, led him on to that further turn of the road where he dismounted always, tied his horse to a tree, and proceeded on foot alone. He reached the edge of the lawn and looked out on the bay beneath. It was his fate, his peculiarity, whether he wished it or not, to come out thus on a spit of land which the sea is slowly eating away, and there to stand, like a desolate sea-bird, alone.
Starting point is 01:33:44 It was his power, his gift, suddenly to shed all superfluities, to shrink and diminish so that he looked bearer and felt sparing, even physically, yet lost none of his intensity of mind, and so to shrink. stand on his little ledge facing the dark of human ignorance, how we know nothing, and the sea eats away the ground we stand on. That was his fate, his gift. But having thrown away, when he dismounted, all gestures and fripperies, all trophies of nuts and roses, and shrunk so that not only fame but even his own name was forgotten by him, kept, even in that desolation, a vigilance which spared no phantom and luxuriated in no vision. And it was in this guise that he inspired in William Banks, intermittently, and in Charles Tanzley, obsequiously.
Starting point is 01:34:42 And in his wife now, when she looked up and saw him standing at the edge of the lawn, profoundly reverence and pity, and gratitude too, as a stake driven into the bed of a channel upon which the gulls perch and the waves beat inspires in merry boatloads a feeling of gratitude for the duty it is taking upon itself of marking the channel out there in the floods alone. But the father of eight children has no choice.
Starting point is 01:35:12 Muttering half aloud, so he broke off, turned, sighed, raised his eyes, sought the figure of his wife reading stories to his little boy, filled his pipe. He turned from the sight of human ignorance and human fate, and the sea eating the ground we stand on, which, had he been able to contemplate it
Starting point is 01:35:33 fixedly, might have led to something, and found consolation in trifles so slight compared with the august theme just now before him, that he was disposed to slur that comfort over, to deprecate it, as if to be caught happy in a world of misery was, for an honest man, the most despicable of crimes. It was true. He was, for the most part, happy. He had his wife, he had his children. He had promised in six weeks' time to talk some nonsense to the young men of Cardiff about Locke, hume, Berkeley, and the causes of the French Revolution.
Starting point is 01:36:13 But this and his pleasure in it, his glory in the phrases he made, in the ardour of youth, in his wife's beauty, in the tributes that reached him from Swansea, Cardiff, Exeter, Southampton, Kidamister, Oxford, Cambridge. All had to be deprecated and concealed under the phrase, talking nonsense, because in effect he had not done the thing he might have done. It was a disguise, it was the refuge of a man afraid to own his own feelings, who could not say, this is what I like, this is what I am. and rather pitiable and distasteful to William Banks and Lily Briscoe, who wondered why such
Starting point is 01:36:57 concealments should be necessary, why he needed always praise, why so brave a man in thought should be so timid in life, how strangely he was venerable and laughable at one and the same time. Teaching and preaching is beyond human power, Lily suspected. She was putting away her things. If you are exalted, you must somehow come a cropper." Mrs. Ramsey gave him what he asked too easily. "'Then the change must be so upsetting,' Lily said.
Starting point is 01:37:30 He comes in from his books and finds us all playing games and talking nonsense. "'Imagine what a change from the things he thinks about,' she said. He was bearing down upon them. Now he stopped dead and stood looking in silence at the sea. Now he had turned away again. End of Section 3. Section 4 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Starting point is 01:38:02 Chapter 9. Yes, Mr. Banks said, watching him go. It was a thousand pities. Lily had said something about his frightening her. He changed from one mood to another so suddenly. Yes, said Mr. Banks. It was a thousand pities that Ramsey could not behave a little more like other people, for he liked Lily Briscoe, he could discuss Ramsey with her quite openly.
Starting point is 01:38:30 It was for that reason, he said, that the young don't read Carlisle. A crusty old grumbler who lost his temper if the porridge was cold, why should he preach to us, was what Mr Banks understood that young people said nowadays. It was a thousand pities, if you thought, as he did, that Carlisle was what one of the great teachers of mankind. Lily was ashamed to say that she had not read Carlisle since she was at school. But in her opinion, one liked Mr. Ramsey all the better, for thinking that if his little finger ached the whole world must come to an end.
Starting point is 01:39:07 It was not that, she minded, for who could be deceived by him. He asked you quite openly to flatter him, to admire him, his little dodges deceived nobody. What she disliked was his narrowness, his blindness, she said, looking after him. A bit of a hypocrite, Mr. Bank suggested, looking too at Mr. Ramsey's back, for was he not thinking of his friendship and of Cam refusing to give him a flower, and of all those boys and girls, and his own house, full of comfort, but, since his wife's death, quiet rather. Of course he had his work. All the same, he rather wished Lily to agree that Ramsey was, as he said, a bit of a hypocrite.
Starting point is 01:39:56 Lily Briscoe went on putting away her brushes, looking up, looking down. Looking up, there he was, Mr. Ramsey, advancing towards them, swinging, careless, oblivious, remote. A bit of a hypocrite, she repeated. Oh, no, the most sincere of men, the truest. Here he was, the best. But looking down, she thought, he is absorbed in himself, he is tyrannical, he is unjust, and kept looking down purposely, for only so could she keep steady, staying with the Ramses. Directly one looked up and saw them, what she called being in love, flooded them.
Starting point is 01:40:42 They became part of that unreal but penetrating and exciting universe, which is the world. seen through the eyes of love the sky stuck to them the birds sang through them and what was even more exciting she felt too as she saw mr. Ramsey bearing down and retreating and Mrs. Ramsey sitting with James in the window and the cloud moving and the tree bending how life from being made up of little separate incidents which one lived one by one became curled and whole, like a wave which bore one up and threw one down with it, there, with a dash on the beach. Mr. Banks expected her to answer, and she was about to say something criticising Mrs. Ramsey,
Starting point is 01:41:29 how she was alarming too in her way, high-handed, or words to that effect, when Mr. Banks made it entirely unnecessary for her to speak by his rapture. For such it was, considering his age, turned sixty, and he was, and he was, he was, and his cleanliness and his impersonality and the white scientific coat which seemed to clothe him. For him to gaze as Lily saw him gazing at Mrs. Ramsey was a rapture, equivalent Lily felt, to the loves of dozens of young men, and perhaps Mrs. Ramsey had never excited the loves of dozens of young men. It was love, she thought, pretending to move her canvas, distilled and filtered, love that never attempted to clutch its object, but, like the love which mathematicians bear their
Starting point is 01:42:18 symbols, or poets, their phrases, was meant to be spread over the world and become part of the human gain. So it was indeed. The world by all means should have shared it, could Mr. Banks have said why that woman pleased him so, why the sight of her reading a fairy tale to her boy had upon him precisely the same effect as the solution of a scientific problem, so that he rested in contemplation of it, and felt, as he felt when he had proved something absolute about the digestive system of plants, that barbarity was tamed, the reign of chaos subdued. Such a rapture, for by what other name could one call it, made Lily Briscoe forget entirely what she had been about to say. It was nothing of importance, something about Mrs. Rapporteur.
Starting point is 01:43:09 It paled beside this rapture, this silent stare, for which she felt intense gratitude, for nothing so solaced her, eased her of the perplexity of life, and miraculously raised its burdens, as this sublime power, this heavenly gift, and one would no more disturb it, while it lasted, than break up the shaft of sunlight, lying level across the floor. That people should love like this, that Mr. Banks should feel this for Mrs. Ramsey. She glanced at him, musing, was helpful, was exulting. She wiped one brush after another upon a piece of old rag, menially on purpose. She took shelter from the reverence which covered all women.
Starting point is 01:43:59 She felt herself praised. Let him gaze. She would steal a look at her picture. She could have wept. It was bad. It was bad. It was infinitely bad. She could have done it differently, of course.
Starting point is 01:44:15 The colour could have been thinned and faded, the shapes etherealised. That was how Poncefort would have seen it. But then she did not see it like that. She saw the colour burning on a framework of steel, the light of a butterfly's wing lying upon the arches of a cathedral. Of all that, only a few random marks scrawled upon the canvas remained. And it would never be seen, never be hung even, and there was Mr. Tansley whispering in her ear, Women can't paint, women can't write.
Starting point is 01:44:50 She now remembered what she had been going to say about Mrs. Ramsey. She did not know how she would have put it, but it would have been something critical. She had been annoyed the other night by some high-handedness. Looking along the level of Mr. Banks' glance at her, she thought that no woman could worship another woman in the way he worshipped. They could only seek shelter under the shade which Mr. Banks extended over them both. Looking along his beam, she added to it her different ray, thinking that she was unquestionably the loveliest of people, bowed over her book, the best, perhaps, but also different, too,
Starting point is 01:45:28 from the perfect shape which one saw there. But why different, and how different, she asked herself, scraping her palate of all those mounds of blue and green, which seemed to her like clods with no life in them now. Yet she vowed she would inspire them, force them to move, flow, do her bidding tomorrow. How did she differ? What was the spirit in her, the essential thing, by which, had you found a crumpled glove in the corner of a sofa, You would have known it from its twisted finger, hers indisputably. She was like a bird for speed, an arrow for directness. She was willful.
Starting point is 01:46:13 She was commanding. Of course, Lily reminded herself, I'm thinking of her relations with women, and I am much younger, an insignificant person living off the Brompton Road. She opened bedroom windows, she shut doors. So she tried to start the two. of Mrs. Ramsey in her head. Arriving late at night, with a light tap on one's bedroom door, wrapped in an old fur coat,
Starting point is 01:46:40 for the setting of her beauty was always that, hasty but apt. She would enact again whatever it might be, Charles Tansley losing his umbrella, Mr. Carmichael snuffling and sniffing, Mr. Banks saying, The vegetable salts are lost. All this she would adroitly shape,
Starting point is 01:46:59 even maliciously twist. And, moving over to the window, in pretence that she must go, it was dawn she could see the sun rising, half turn back, more intimately, but still always laughing, insist that she must, Minter must, they all must marry, since in the whole world whatever laurels might be tossed to her. But Mrs. Ramsey cared not a fig for her painting, or triumphs won by her.
Starting point is 01:47:27 Probably Mrs. Ramsey had had her share of those. And here she saddened, darkened, and came back to her chair. There could be no disputing this. An unmarried woman. She lightly took her hand for a moment. An unmarried woman has missed the best of life. The house seemed full of children sleeping and Mrs. Ramsey listening, shaded lights and regular breathing.
Starting point is 01:47:55 Oh, but Lily would say, There was her father, her home, even had she dared to say it, her painting. But all this seemed so little, so virginal against the other. Yet, as the night wore on, and white lights parted the curtains, and even now and then some bird chirped in the garden, gathering a desperate courage she would urge her own exemption from the universal law, plead for it. She liked to be alone.
Starting point is 01:48:27 She liked to be herself. She was not made for that. And so have to meet a serious stare from eyes of unparalleled depth and confront Mrs. Ramsey's simple certainty, and she was childlike now, that her dear Lily, her little brisk, was a fool. Then she remembered, she had laid her head on Mrs. Ramsey's lap, and laughed and laughed and laughed,
Starting point is 01:48:52 laughed almost hysterically at the thought of Mrs. Ramsey, presiding with immutable calm over destinies which she completely failed to understand. There she sat, simple, serious. She had recovered her sense of her now. This was the gloves twisted finger. But into what sanctuary had one penetrated? Lily Briscoe had looked up at last, and there was Mrs. Ramsey, unwitting entirely what had caused her laughter,
Starting point is 01:49:23 still presiding, but now with every trace of willfulness abolished, and in its stead something clear as the space which the clouds at last uncover, the little space of sky which sleeps beside the moon. Was it wisdom? Was it knowledge? Was it once more the deceptiveness of beauty, so that all one's perceptions, halfway to truth, were tangled in a golden mesh?
Starting point is 01:49:51 Or did she lock up within her some secret, which certainly Lily Briscoe believed people must have for the world to go on at all. Everyone could not be as helter-skelter, hand-to-mouth as she was. But if they knew, could they tell one what they knew? Sitting on the floor with her arms round Mrs. Ramsey's knees, close as she could get, smiling to think that Mrs. Ramsey would never know the reason of that pressure, she imagined how,
Starting point is 01:50:20 in the chambers of the mind and heart of the woman, who was, physically touching her, were stood, like the treasures in the tombs of kings, tablets bearing sacred inscriptions, which, if one could spell them out, would teach one everything, but they would never be offered openly, never made public. What art was there, known to love or cunning, by which one pressed through into those secret chambers? What device for becoming, like waters poured into one jar. are, inextricably the same, one with the object one adored.
Starting point is 01:50:59 Could the body achieve, or the mind, subtly mingling in the intricate passages of the brain, or the heart? Could loving, as people called it, make her and Mrs. Ramsey one? For it was not knowledge, but unity that she desired, not inscriptions on tablets, nothing that could be written in any language known to men, but intimacy itself. Which is knowledge, she had thought, leaning her head on Mrs. Ramsey's knee. Nothing happened, nothing, nothing, as she leant her head against Mrs. Ramsey's knee. And yet she knew knowledge and wisdom were stored up in Mrs. Ramsey's heart.
Starting point is 01:51:43 How then, she had asked herself, did one know one thing or another thing about people, sealed as they were? Only like a bee, drawn by some sweetness or sharpness in the air, intangible to touch or taste, one haunted the dome-shaped hive, ranged the wastes of the air over the countries of the world alone, and then haunted the hives with their murmurs and their stirrings, the hives which were people. Mrs. Ramsey rose, Lily rose, Mrs. Ramsey went. For days they hung about her, as after a dream some subtle changes felt in the person one has dreamt of, more vividly than anything she said, the sound of murmuring, and as she sat in the wicker armchair in the drawing-room window, she wore, to Lily's eyes, an august shape, the shape of a dome.
Starting point is 01:52:41 This ray passed level with Mr. Banks's ray straight to Mrs. Ramsey, sitting reading there with James at her knee. But now, while she still looked, Mr. Banks had done, he had put on his spectacles, he had stepped back, he had raised his hand, he had slightly narrowed his clear blue eyes, when Lily, rousing herself, saw what he was at, and winced like a dog who sees a hand raised to strike it. She would have snatched her picture off the easel, but she said to herself, one must. She braced herself to stand the awful trial of someone looking at her picture. One must, she said, one must.
Starting point is 01:53:25 And, if it must be seen, Mr. Banks was less alarming than another. But that any other eyes should see the residue of her 33 years, the deposit of each day's living mixed with something more secret than she had ever spoken or shown in the course of all those days, was an agony. At the same time, it was immensely exciting. Nothing could be cooler and quieter. Taking out a penknife, Mr. Banks tapped the canvas with the bone handle.
Starting point is 01:53:57 What did she wish to indicate by the triangular purple shape? Just there, he asked. It was Mrs. Ramsey reading to James, she said. She knew his objection, that no one could tell it for a human shape, But she had made no attempt at likeness, she said. For what reason had she introduced them then, he asked. Why indeed, except that, if there, in that corner it was bright, here, in this, she felt the need of darkness.
Starting point is 01:54:30 Simple, obvious, commonplace as it was, Mr. Banks was interested. Mother and child, then, objects of universal veneration, and in this this case the mother was famous for her beauty, might be reduced, he pondered, to a purple shadow without irreverence. But the picture was not of them, she said, or not in his sense. There were other senses too in which one might reverence them, by a shadow here and a light there, for instance. Her tribute took that form, if, as she vaguely supposed, a picture must be a tribute.
Starting point is 01:55:10 A mother and child might be reduced to a shadow without irreverence. A light here required a shadow there. He considered, he was interested, he took it scientifically in complete good faith. The truth was that all his prejudices were on the other side, he explained. The largest picture in his dining room, which painters had praised and valued at a higher price than he had given for it, was of the cherry trees in blossom. on the banks of the Kennet. He had spent his honeymoon on the banks of the Kennet, he said.
Starting point is 01:55:47 Lily must come and see that picture, he said. But now, he turned, with his glasses raised, to the scientific examination of her canvas. The question being one of the relations of masses, of lights and shadows, which, to be honest, he had never considered before. He would like to have it explained. What then did she wish to me?
Starting point is 01:56:10 make of it, and he indicated the scene before them. She looked. She could not show him what she wished to make of it, could not see it even herself, without a brush in her hand. She took up once more her old painting position, with the dim eyes and the absent-minded manner, subduing all her impressions as a woman to something much more general, becoming once more and the power of that vision which she had seen clearly once, and must now grope for among hedges and houses and mothers and children, her picture. It was a question, she remembered, how to connect this mass on the right hand with that on the left. She might do it by bringing the line of the branch across so, or break the vacancy
Starting point is 01:56:59 in the foreground by an object, James perhaps, so. But the danger was that by doing that the unity of the whole might be broken. She stopped. She did not want to bore him. She took the canvas lightly off the easel. But it had been seen. It had been taken from her. This man had shared with her something profoundly intimate. And, thanking Mr. Ramsey for it, and Mrs. Ramsey for it, and the hour and the place, crediting the world with a power which she had not suspected, that one could walk away down that long gallery, not alone anymore, but arm in arm with somebody, the strangest feeling in the world, and the most exhilarating. She nicked the catch of her paintbox, too, more firmly than was necessary,
Starting point is 01:57:49 and the nick seemed to surround in a circle forever the paintbox, the lawn, Mr. Banks, and that wild villain, Cam, dashing past. Chapter 10 For Cam grazed the easel by an inch. She would not stop for Mr. Banks and Lily Brisco, though Mr. Banks, who would have liked a daughter of his own, held out his hand. She would not stop for her father, whom she grazed also by an inch, nor for her mother, who called, Cam, I want you a moment, as she dashed past. She was off like a bird, bullet or arrow, impelled by what desire, shot by whom, at what directed, who could say.
Starting point is 01:58:34 "'What, what?' Mrs. Ramsey pondered, watching her. "'It might be a vision of a shell, of a wheelbarrow, "'of a fairy kingdom on the far side of the hedge, "'or it might be the glory of speed, no one knew. "'But when Mrs. Ramsey called, "'Cam!' a second time, "'the projectile dropped in mid-career, "'and Cam came lagging back,
Starting point is 01:59:00 "'pulling a leaf by the way, to her mother. "'What was she dreaming, about, Mrs. Ramsey wondered, seeing her engrossed, as she stood there with some thought of her own, so that she had to repeat the message twice, ask Mildred if Andrew, Miss Doyle and Mr. Raleigh have come back. The words seemed to be dropped into a well, where, if the waters were clear, they were also so extraordinarily distorting that, even as they descended, one saw them twisting about to make heaven knows what pattern on the floor of the child's mind. What message? would Cam give the cook, Mrs. Ramsey wondered.
Starting point is 01:59:38 And indeed it was only by waiting patiently, and hearing that there was an old woman in the kitchen with very red cheeks drinking soup out of a basin, that Mrs. Ramsey at last prompted that parrot-like instinct which had picked up Mildred's words quite accurately, and could now produce them, if one waited, in a colourless sing-song. Shifting from foot to foot, Cam repeated the words. No, they haven't, and I've told Ellen to clear away tea.
Starting point is 02:00:04 Minter Doyle and Paul Rayleigh had not come back then. That could only mean, Mrs. Ramsey thought, one thing. She must accept him, or she must refuse him. This going off after luncheon for a walk, even though Andrew was with them, what could it mean? Except that she had decided, rightly Mrs. Ramsey thought, and she was very, very fond of Minter, to accept that good fellow, who might not be brilliant. Then, thought Mrs. Ramsey, realising that James was tugging at her, to make her go on reading
Starting point is 02:00:40 aloud the fisherman and his wife. She did in her own heart infinitely prefer boobies to clever men who wrote dissertations, Charles Tansley, for instance. Anyhow, it must have happened, one way or the other, by now. But she read, next morning the wife awoke first, and it was just daybreak, and from her bed she saw the beautiful country lying before her. Her husband was still stretching himself. But how could Minter say now that she would not have him?
Starting point is 02:01:12 Not if she agreed to spend whole afternoons traipsing about the country alone, for Andrew would be off after his crabs, but possibly Nancy was with them. She tried to recall the sight of them standing at the hall door after lunch. There they stood, looking at the sky, wondering about the weather, and she had said, thinking partly to cover their shyness, partly to encourage them to be off, for her sympathies were with Paul.
Starting point is 02:01:39 There isn't a cloud anywhere within miles, at which she could feel little Charles Tansley, who had followed them out, Snigger. But she did it on purpose. Whether Nancy was there or not, she could not be certain, looking from one to the other in her mind's eye. She read on, "'Our wife,' said the man, "'why should we be king?
Starting point is 02:02:03 I do not want to be king.' "'Well,' said the wife, "'if you won't be king, I will. "'Go to the flounder, for I will be king.' "'Come in or go out, Cam,' she said, "'knowing that Cam was attracted only by the word flounder, "'and that in a moment she would fidget and fight with James as usual.' Cam shut off.
Starting point is 02:02:26 Mrs. Ramsey went on reading, relieved, "'for she and James shared the same tastes "'and were comfortable together.' "'And when he was, he said, he came to the sea, it was quite dark grey, and the water heaved up from below and smelt putrid. Then he went and stood by it and said, Flounder, flounder in the sea, come I pray thee here to me, for my wife good Ilsebill, wills not as I'd have her will. Well, what does she want then? said the flounder.
Starting point is 02:02:57 And where were they now, Mrs. Ramsey wondered, reading and thinking quite easily both at the same time, for the story of the fisherman and his wife was like the bass gently accompanying a tune which now and then ran up unexpectedly into the melody. And when should she be told? If nothing happened she would have to speak seriously to Minter, for she could not go traipsing about all over the country, even if Nancy were with them. She tried again unsuccessfully to visualize their backs going down the path and to count them. was responsible to Minter's parents, the owl and the poker. Her nicknames for them shot into
Starting point is 02:03:40 her mind as she read. The owl and the poker. Yes, they would be annoyed if they heard, and they were certain to hear, that Minter, staying with the Ramses, had been seen, etc., etc., etc. He wore a wig in the House of Commons, and she ably assisted him at the head of the stairs, she repeated, fishing them up out of her mind by a phrase which, coming back from some party, she had made to amuse her husband. Dear, dear, Mrs. Ramsey said to herself, how did they produce this incongruous daughter, this tomboy minta with a hole in her stocking? How did she exist in that portentous atmosphere, where the maid was always removing in a dustpan
Starting point is 02:04:23 the sand that the parrot had scattered, and conversation was almost entirely reduced to the exploits, interesting perhaps but limited after all, of that bird. Naturally one had asked her to lunch, tea, dinner, finally to stay with them up at Finley, which had resulted in some friction with the owl, her mother, and more calling, and more conversation, and more sand, and really at the end of it, she had told enough lies about parrots to last her a lifetime, so she had said to her husband that night, coming back from the party. However, Minter came.
Starting point is 02:05:00 Yes, she came, Mrs. Ramsey thought, suspecting some thorn in the tangle of this thought, and disengaging it found it to be this. A woman had once accused her of robbing her of her daughter's affections. Something Mrs. Doyle had said made her remember that charge again. Wishing to dominate, wishing to interfere, making people do what she wished, that was the charge against her,
Starting point is 02:05:26 and she thought it most unjust. How could she help being like that to look at? No one could accuse her of taking pains to impress. She was often ashamed of her own shabbiness. Nor was she domineering, nor was she tyrannical. It was more true about hospitals and drains and the dairy. About things like that she did feel passionately, and would, if she had the chance,
Starting point is 02:05:52 have liked to take people by the scruff of their necks and make them see. No hospital on the whole island. It was a disgrace. Milk delivered at your door in London positively brown with dirt. It should be made illegal. A mazzled dairy and a hospital up here. Those two things she would have liked to do herself. But how? With all these children? When they were older, then perhaps she would have time, when they were all at school. Oh, but she never wanted James to grow a day older, or can't. either. These two she would have liked to keep forever just as they were, demons of wickedness, angels of delight, never to see them grow up into long-legged monsters. Nothing made up for the loss. When she read just now to James, and there were numbers of soldiers with kettle-drums and trumpets, and his eyes darkened, she thought, why should they grow up and lose all that? He was the most gifted, the most sensitive of her children, but all she thought were full of promise. Prue, a perfect angel with the others, and sometimes now, at night especially, she took one's breath away with her beauty.
Starting point is 02:07:10 Andrew, even her husband admitted that his gift for mathematics was extraordinary. And Nancy and Roger, they were both wild creatures now, scampering about over the country all day long. As for Rose, her mouth was too big, but she had a wonderful gift with her hands. If they had charades, Rose made the dresses, made everything, liked best arranging tables, flowers, anything. She did not like it that Jasper should shoot birds, but it was only a stage. They all went through stages. Why, she asked, pressing her chin on James's head, should they grow up so fast? Why should they go to school? She would have liked always to have had a baby.
Starting point is 02:07:56 She was happiest carrying one in her arms. Then people might say she was tyrannical, domineering, masterful, if they chose. She did not mind. And, touching his hair with her lips, she thought, He will never be so happy again. But stopped herself, remembering how it angered her husband that she should say that. Still, it was true. True. They were happier now than they would ever be again. A tenpenny tea set made Cam happy for days.
Starting point is 02:08:28 She heard them stamping and crowing on the floor above her head the moment they awoke. They came bustling along the passage. Then the door sprang open and in they came, fresh as roses, staring, wide awake, as if this coming into the dining room after breakfast, which they did every day of their lives, was a positive event to them. And so on with one thing after another, all day long, until she went up to say good-night to them, and found them netted in their cots like birds among cherries and raspberries, still making up stories about some little bit of rubbish, something they had heard, something they had picked up in the garden. They all had their little treasures. And so she went down and said to her husband,
Starting point is 02:09:13 why must they grow up and lose it all? Never will they be so happy again. And he was angry. Why take such a gloomy view of life, he said, it is not sensible. For it was odd, and she believed it to be true, that with all his gloom and desperation, he was happier, more hopeful on the whole than she was. Less exposed to human worries, perhaps that was it. He always had his work to fall back on. Not that she herself was pessimistic, as he accused her of being. Only she thought life.
Starting point is 02:09:50 And a little strip of time presented itself to her eyes, her fifty years. There it was before her, life. Life, she thought, but she did not finish her thought. She took a look at life, for she had a clear sense of it there, something real, something private, which she shared neither with her children nor with her husband. A sort of transaction went on between them, in which she was on one side and life was on another,
Starting point is 02:10:19 and she was always trying to get the better of it, as it was of her, and sometimes they parleyed when she sat there alone. There were, she remembered, great reconciliation scenes, but for the most part, oddly enough, she must admit that she felt this thing she called life terrible, hostile, and quick to pounce on you if you gave it a chance. There were eternal problems, suffering, death, the poor. there was always a woman dying of cancer even here. And yet she had said to all these children,
Starting point is 02:10:55 you shall go through it all. To eight people she had said relentlessly that, and the bill for the greenhouse would be fifty pounds. For that reason, knowing what was before them, love and ambition and being wretched alone in dreary places, she had often the feeling, why must they grow up and lose it all? And then she said to herself, brandishing her sword at life, nonsense, they will be perfectly happy.
Starting point is 02:11:25 And here she was, she reflected, feeling life rather sinister again, making Minter marry Paul Rayleigh, because whatever she might feel about her own transaction, she had had experiences which need not happen to everyone. She did not name them to herself. She was driven on, too quickly she knew, almost as if it were an escape for her too, to say that people must marry, people must have children. Was she wrong in this, she asked herself, reviewing her conduct for the past week or two, and wondering if she had indeed put any pressure upon Minter, who was only 24, to make up her mind? She was uneasy. Had she not laughed about it? Was she not forgetting again how sorry. strongly she influenced people. Marriage needed, all sorts of qualities. The bill for the greenhouse would be fifty pounds. One, she need not name it, that was essential, the thing she had with her
Starting point is 02:12:25 husband. Had they that? Then he put on his trousers and ran away like a madman, she read. But outside a great storm was raging and blowing so hard that he could scarcely keep his feet. houses and trees toppled over, the mountains trembled, rocks rolled into the sea, the sky was pitch black, and it thundered and lightened, and the sea came in with black waves as high as church towers and mountains, and all with white foam at the top. She turned the page, there were only a few lines more, so that she would finish the story, though it was past bedtime. It was getting late. The light in the garden told her that, and the whitening of the flowers and something grey in the leaves conspired together to rouse in her a feeling of anxiety. What it was about she could not think at first. Then she
Starting point is 02:13:23 remembered Paul and Minter and Andrew had not come back. She summoned before her again the little group on the terrace in front of the hall door, standing looking up into the sky. Andrew had his net and basket. That meant he was going to catch crabs on. things. That meant he would climb out onto a rock. He would be cut off. Or coming back, single file on one of those little paths above the cliff, one of them might slip. He would roll and then crash. It was growing quite dark. But she did not let her voice change in the least as she finished the story, and added, shutting the book, and speaking the last words as if she had made them up herself, looking into James's eyes. And there they are, living still at this very very very important. And there they are,
Starting point is 02:14:08 living still at this very time. And that's the end, she said, and she saw in his eyes, as the interest of the story died away in them, something else take its place, something wandering, pale, like the reflection of a light, which had once made him gaze and marvel. Turning, she looked across the bay, and there, sure enough, coming regularly across the waves, first two quick strokes, and then one long, steady stroke, was the light of the lighthouse. It had been lit. In a moment he would ask her,
Starting point is 02:14:46 are we going to the lighthouse? And she would have to say, no, not tomorrow. Your father says not. Happily Mildred came in to fetch them, and the bustle distracted them. But he kept looking back over his shoulder as Mildred carried him out, and she was certain that he was thinking, We are not going to the lighthouse tomorrow, and she thought he will remember that all his life. End of Section 4.
Starting point is 02:15:15 Section 5 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Libre Vrox recording is in the public domain. Chapter 11. No, she thought, putting together some of the pictures he had cut out, a refrigerator, a mowing machine, a gentleman in evening dress. Children never forget. For this reason it was so important what one said and what one did, and it was a relief when they went to bed.
Starting point is 02:15:44 For now she need not think about anybody. She could be herself, by herself. And that was what now she often felt the need of, to think, well, not even to think, to be silent, to be alone. All the being and the doing, expansive, glittering, vocal, evaporating. and one shrunk with a sense of solemnity to being oneself, a wedge-shaped core of darkness, something invisible to others. Although she continued to knit and sat upright, it was thus that she felt herself,
Starting point is 02:16:23 and this self, having shed its attachments, was free for the strangest adventures. When life sank down for a moment, the range of experience seemed limitless. And to everybody there was always this sense. of unlimited resources, she supposed, one after another, she, Lily, Augustus Carmichael, must feel our apparitions, the things you know us by, are simply childish. Beneath it is all dark, it is all spreading, it is unfathomably deep, but now and again we rise to the surface and that is what you see us by. Her horizon seemed to her limitless.
Starting point is 02:17:05 There were all the places she had not seen, the Indian plains, she felt herself pushing aside the thick leather curtain of a church in Rome. This core of darkness could go anywhere, for no one saw it. They could not stop it, she thought, exulting. There was freedom, there was peace. There was, most welcome of all, a summoning together, and resting on a platform of stability. Not as one's self did one find rest ever, in her experience. She accomplished here something dexterous with her needles, but as a wedge of darkness.
Starting point is 02:17:45 Losing personality, one lost the fret, the hurry, the stir, and there rose to her lips always some exclamation of triumph over life when things came together in this peace, this rest, this eternity. And pausing there, she looked out to meet that, stroke of the lighthouse, the long, steady stroke, the last of the three, which was her stroke. For watching them in this mood always at this hour, one could not help attaching oneself to one thing especially of the things one saw, and this thing, the long, steady stroke, was her stroke. Often she found herself sitting and looking, sitting and looking, with her work
Starting point is 02:18:29 in her hands, until she became the thing she looked at. That's a little. light, for example. And it would lift up on it some little phrase or other which had been lying in her mind like that. Children don't forget. Children don't forget. Which she would repeat and begin adding to it. It will end.
Starting point is 02:18:48 It will end, she said. It will come. It will come. When suddenly she added, we are in the hands of the Lord. But instantly she was annoyed with herself for saying that. Who had said it? not she. She had been trapped into saying something she did not mean. She looked up over her knitting and met the third stroke, and it seemed to her like her own eyes meeting her own eyes,
Starting point is 02:19:17 searching as she alone could search into her mind and her heart, purifying out of existence that lie, any lie. She praised herself in praising the light, without vanity, for she was stern. She was searching. She was beautiful like that light. It was odd, she thought. How, if one was alone, one lent to inanimate things. Trees, streams, flowers. Felt they expressed one. Felt they became one. Felt they knew one. In a sense, were one. Felt an irrational tenderness thus. She looked at that long, steady light, as for oneself. There rose, and she looked and looked with her needles suspended, there curled up off the floor of the mind, rose from the lake of one's being, a mist, a bride to meet her lover.
Starting point is 02:20:15 What brought her to say that? We are in the hands of the Lord, she wondered. The insincerity slipping in among the truths roused her, annoyed her. She returned to her knitting again. How could any law have made this world, she asked. With her mind she had always seized the fact that there is no reason, order, justice, but suffering, death, the poor. There was no treachery too base for the world to commit, she knew that. No happiness lasted, she knew that. She knitted with firm composure, slightly pursing her lips, and, without being aware of it, so stiffened and composed the lines of her face in a habit of sternness, that when her husband passed, though he was chuckling at the thought that Hume, the philosopher, grown enormously fat, had stuck in a bog, he could not help noting, as he passed, the sternness at the heart of her beauty. It saddened him, and her remoteness
Starting point is 02:21:21 pained him, and he felt, as he passed, that he could not protect her, and, when he reached the hedge, he was sad. He could do nothing to help her. He must stand by and watch her. Indeed, the infernal truth was, he made things worse for her. He was irritable. He was touchy. He had lost his temper over the lighthouse. He looked into the hedge, into its intricacy, its darkness. Always, Mrs. Ramsey felt, one helped oneself out of solitude, reluctance, and by laying hold of some little odd or end, some sound, some sight. She listened, but it was all very still. Cricket was over. The children were in their baths.
Starting point is 02:22:11 There was only the sound of the sea. She stopped knitting. She held the long, reddish-brown stocking dangling in her hands a moment. She saw the light again. With some irony in her interrogation, for when one woke at all, one's relation. changed. She looked at the steady light, the pitiless, the remorseless, which was so much her, yet so little her, which had her at its beckoned core. She woke in the night and saw it bent across
Starting point is 02:22:42 their bed, stroking the floor. But for all that, she thought, watching it with fascination, hypnotised, as if it was stroking with its silver fingers some sealed vessel in her brain, whose bursting would flutter with delight. She had known happiness, exquisite happiness, intense happiness. And it silvered the rough waves a little more brightly, as daylight faded, and the blue went out of the sea, and it rolled in waves of pure lemon, which curved and swelled and broke upon the beach,
Starting point is 02:23:16 and the ecstasy burst in her eyes, and waves of pure delight raced over the floor of her mind, and she felt it is enough. enough. He turned and saw her. Ah, she was lovely, lovelier now than ever, he thought. But he could not speak to her. He could not interrupt her. He wanted urgently to speak to her now that James was gone and she was alone at last. But he resolved, no, he would not interrupt her. She was aloof from him now in her beauty, in her sadness. He would let her be, and he passed her without a word, though it hurt him that she should look so distant and he could not
Starting point is 02:23:59 reach her, he could do nothing to help her. And again he would have passed her without a word, had she not, at that very moment, given him of her own free will what she knew he would never ask, and called to him and taken the green shawl off the picture frame and gone to him, for he wished, she knew, to protect her. Chapter 12 She folded the green shawl about her shoulders. She took his arm. His beauty was so great, she said, beginning to speak of Kennedy the Gardner. At once he was so awfully handsome that she couldn't dismiss him.
Starting point is 02:24:41 There was a ladder against the greenhouse, and little lumps of putty stuck about, for they were beginning to mend the greenhouse. Yes, but as she strolled along with her husband, she felt that that particular source of worry had been placed. She had it on the tip of her tongue to say, as they strolled, it'll cost fifty pounds. But instead, for her heart failed her about money, she talked about Jasper shooting birds,
Starting point is 02:25:08 and he said, at once, soothing her instantly, that it was natural in a boy, and he trusted he would find better ways of amusing himself before long. Her husband was so sensible, so just. And so she said, yes, all children go through stages, and began considering the dalyas in the big bed, and wondering what about next year's flowers, and had he heard the children's nickname for Charles Tansley, she asked. The atheist, they called him, the little atheist.
Starting point is 02:25:39 He's not a polished specimen, said Mr. Ramsey. Far from it, said Mrs. Ramsey. She supposed it was all right, leaving him to his own devices, Mrs. Ramsey. said, wondering whether it was any use sending down bulbs. Did they plant them? Oh, he has his dissertation to write, said Mr. Ramsey. She knew all about that, said Mrs. Ramsey. He talked of nothing else. It was about the influence of somebody upon something. Well, it's all he has to count on, said Mr. Ramsey. Pray heaven he won't fall in love with Prue, said Mrs. Ramsey.
Starting point is 02:26:19 He'd disinherit her if she married him, said Mr. Ramsey. He did not look at the flowers which his wife was considering, but at a spot about a foot or so above them. There was no harm in him, he added, and was just about to say that anyhow he was the only young man in England who admired his, when he choked it back. He would not bother her again about his books. These flowers seemed creditable, Mr. Ramsey said, lowering his gaze and noted. something red, something brown. Yes, but then these she had put in with her own hands, said Mrs. Ramsey. The question was, what happened if she sent bulbs down? Did Kennedy plant them?
Starting point is 02:27:03 It was his incurable laziness, she added, moving on. If she stood over him all day long with a spade in her hand, he did sometimes do a stroke of work. So they strolled along towards the red-hot pokers. "'You're teaching your daughters to exaggerate,' said Mr. Ramsey, reproving her. "'Her Aunt Camilla was far worse than she was,' Mrs. Ramsey remarked. "'Nobody ever held up your Aunt Camilla as a model of virtue that I'm aware of,' said Mr. Ramsey. "'She was the most beautiful woman I ever saw,' said Mrs. Ramsey.
Starting point is 02:27:41 "'Somebody else was that,' said Mr. Ramsey. "'Prue was going to be far more beautiful than she was.' said Mrs. Ramsey. He saw no trace of it, said Mr. Ramsey. Well then, look tonight, said Mrs. Ramsey. They paused. He wished Andrew could be induced to work harder. He would lose every chance of a scholarship if he didn't.
Starting point is 02:28:06 Oh, scholarships, she said. Mr. Ramsey thought her foolish for saying that, about a serious thing like a scholarship. He should be very proud of Andrew if he got a scholarship, he said. said. She would be just as proud of him if he didn't, she answered. They disagreed always about this, but it did not matter. She liked him to believe in scholarships, and he liked her to be proud of Andrew whatever he did. Suddenly she remembered those little paths on the edge of the cliffs.
Starting point is 02:28:38 Wasn't it late, she asked. They hadn't come home yet. He flicked his watch carelessly open, but it was only just past seven. He held his watch open for a moment, deciding that he would tell her what he had felt on the terrace. To begin with, it was not reasonable to be so nervous. Andrew could look after himself. Then he wanted to tell her that when he was walking on the terrace just now. Here he became uncomfortable, as if he were breaking into that solitude, that aloofness, that remoteness of hers. But she pressed him.
Starting point is 02:29:16 What had he wanted to tell her? her, she asked, thinking it was about going to the lighthouse, that he was sorry he had said, damn you. But no, he did not like to see her look so sad, he said. Only wool gathering, she protested, flushing a little. They both felt uncomfortable, as if they did not know whether to go on or go back. She had been reading fairy tales to James, she said. No, they could not share that. They could not say that. They had reached the gap between the two clumps of red-hot pokers, and there was the lighthouse again, but she would not let herself look at it. Had she known that he was looking at her, she thought, she would not have let herself sit there thinking.
Starting point is 02:30:03 She disliked anything that reminded her that she had been seen sitting thinking. So she looked over her shoulder at the town. The lights were rippling and running as if there were drops of silver water held firm in a wind. And all the poverty, all the suffering had turned to that, Mrs. Ramsey thought. The lights of the town, and of the harbour, and of the boats, seemed like a phantom net floating there to mark something which had sunk. Well, if he could not share her thoughts, Mr. Ramsey said to himself, he would be off then, on his own. He wanted to go on thinking, telling himself the story how Hume was stuck in a bog, he wanted to laugh. But first it was nonsense to be anxious about Andrew.
Starting point is 02:30:51 When he was Andrew's age, he used to walk about the country all day long, with nothing but a biscuit in his pocket, and nobody bothered about him or thought that he had fallen over a cliff. He said aloud he thought he would be off for a day's walk, if the weather held. He had had about enough of banks and of Carmichael. He would like a little solitude. Yes, she said. It annoyed him that she did not.
Starting point is 02:31:16 protest. She knew that he would never do it. He was too old now to walk all day long with a biscuit in his pocket. She worried about the boys, but not about him. Years ago, before he had married, he thought, looking across the bay, as they stood between the clumps of red-hot pokers, he had walked all day. He had made a meal off bread and cheese in a public house. He had worked ten hours at a stretch, an old woman just popped her head in now and again and sawed the fire. That was the country he liked best. Over there, those sand hills dwindling away into darkness. One could walk all day without meeting a soul. There was not a house scarcely, not a single village for miles on end. One could worry things out alone. There were little sandy beaches where
Starting point is 02:32:10 no one had been since the beginning of time. The seals sat up and looked at you. It sometimes seemed to him that in a little house out there, alone, he broke off, sighing. He had no right. The father of eight children, he reminded himself, and he would have been a beast and occurred to wish a single thing altered. Andrew would be a better man than he had been. Prue would be a beauty, her mother said. They would say, stem the flood a bit. That was a good bit of work on the whole, his eight children. They showed he did not damn the poor little universe entirely. For, on an evening like this, he thought, looking at the land dwindling away, the little island seemed pathetically small,
Starting point is 02:32:59 half swallowed up in the sea. Poor little place, he murmured with a sigh. She heard him. He said the most melancholy things. but she noticed that directly he had said them, he always seemed more cheerful than usual. All this phrase-making was a game, she thought, for if she had said half what he said, she would have blown her brains out by now. It annoyed her, this phrase-making, and she said to him, in a matter-of-fact way, that it was a perfectly lovely evening. And what was he groaning about, she asked, half laughing, half complaining,
Starting point is 02:33:38 for she guessed what he was thinking. He would have written better books if he had not married. He was not complaining, he said. She knew that he did not complain. She knew that he had nothing whatever to complain of. And he seized her hand and raised it to his lips and kissed it with an intensity that brought the tears to her eyes, and quickly he dropped it.
Starting point is 02:34:01 They turned away from the view and began to walk up the path where the silver-green spear-like plants grew, arm in arm. His arm was almost like a young man's arm, Mrs. Ramsey thought, thin and hard, and she thought with delight how strong he still was, though he was over sixty, and how untamed and optimistic, and how strange it was that being convinced, as he was, of all sorts of horrors, seemed not to depress him, but to cheer him. Was it not odd, she reflected? Indeed, he seemed to her sometimes made differently from other people, born blind, deaf and dumb to the ordinary things, but to the extraordinary things, with an eye like an eagle's.
Starting point is 02:34:47 His understanding often astonished her. But did he notice the flowers? No. Did he notice the view? No. Did he even notice his own daughter's beauty, or whether there was pudding on his plate or roast beef? He would sit at table with them like a person in a dream. And his habit of talking aloud, or saying poetry aloud, was growing on him, she was afraid,
Starting point is 02:35:13 for sometimes it was awkward. Best and brightest come away. Poor Miss Giddings, when he shouted that at her, almost jumped out of her skin. But then, Mrs. Ramsey, though instantly taking his side against all the silly Giddingses in the world, then, she thought, intimating by a little pressure on his arm that he walked uphill too fast for her, and she must stop for a moment to see whether those were fresh molehills on the bank. Then, she thought, stooping down to look, a great mind like his must be different in every way from ours.
Starting point is 02:35:49 All the great men she had ever known, she thought, deciding that a rabbit must have got in, were like that, and it was good for young men, though the atmosphere of lecture. rooms was stuffy and depressing to her beyond endurance almost, simply to hear him, simply to look at him. But without shooting rabbits, how was one to keep them down, she wondered. It might be a rabbit, it might be a mole. Some creature anyhow was ruining her evening primroses. And looking up, she saw above the thin trees the first pulse of the full throbbing star, and wanted to make her husband look at it, for the sight gave her such keen pleasure. But she stopped herself. He never looked at things. If he did, all he would say would be, poor little world, with one of his sighs.
Starting point is 02:36:42 At that moment he said, very fine, to please her, and pretended to admire the flowers. But she knew quite well that he did not admire them, or even realised that they were there. It was only to please her. "'Ah, but was that not Lily Briscoe strolling along with William Banks?' She focused her short-sighted eyes upon the backs of a retreating couple. "'Yes, indeed it was. Did that not mean that they would marry? "'Yes, it must. What an admirable idea. They must marry.' "'Chapter thirteen. He had been to Amsterdam,' Mr. Banks was saying, as he strolled across the lawn with Lily Brisco. He had seen the same. He had seen the
Starting point is 02:37:30 the Rembrandts. He had been to Madrid. Unfortunately, it was good Friday and the Prado was shut. He had been to Rome. Had Miss Brisco never been to Rome? Oh, she should. It would be a wonderful experience for her, the Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo, and Padua with its Giottoes. His wife had been in bad health for many years, so that their sightseeing had been on a modest scale. She had been to Brussels. She had been to Paris, but only for a flying visit to see an aunt who was ill. She had been to Dresden. There were masses of pictures she had not seen. However, Lily Briscoe reflected, perhaps it was better not to see pictures. They only made one hopelessly discontented with one's own work. Mr. Banks thought one could carry that point
Starting point is 02:38:21 of view too far. We can't all be Titians and we can't all be Darwin's, he said. said. At the same time he doubted whether you could have your Darwin and your Titian if it weren't for humble people like ourselves. Lily would have liked to pay him a compliment. You're not humble, Mr. Banks, she would have liked to have said. But he did not want compliments. Most men do, she thought, and she was a little ashamed of her impulse and said nothing, while he remarked that perhaps what he was saying did not apply to pictures. Anyhow, said Lily, tossing off her little insincerity, she would always go on painting because it interested her.
Starting point is 02:39:03 Yes, said Mr. Banks, he was sure she would. And, as they reached the end of the lawn, he was asking her whether she had difficulty in finding subjects in London, when they turned and saw the Ramses. So that is marriage, Lily thought, a man and a woman looking at a girl throwing a ball. That is what Mrs. Ramsey tried to tell me the other night, she thought, for she was wearing a green shawl, and they were standing close together, watching Prue and Jasper throwing catches. And suddenly, the meaning which, for no reason at all, as perhaps they are stepping out of the tube or ringing a doorbell, descends on people, making them symbolical, making them representative, came upon them, and made them in the dusk standing, looking, the symbols. of marriage, husband and wife. Then, after an instant, the symbolical outline which transcended the real figures sank down again,
Starting point is 02:40:03 and they became, as they met them, Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey watching the children throwing catches. But still, for a moment, though Mrs. Ramsey greeted them with her usual smile. Oh, she's thinking we're going to get married, Lily thought, and said, I have triumphed tonight, meaning that for once Mr Banks had agreed to dine with them, and not run off to his own lodging where his man cooked vegetables properly. Still, for one moment, there was a sense of things having been blown apart, of space, of irresponsibility as the ball soared high, and they followed it and lost it, and saw the one star and the draped branches.
Starting point is 02:40:47 In the failing light they all looked sharp-edged and defrapped, and ethereal and divided by great distances. Then, darting backwards over the vast space, for it seemed as if solidity had vanished altogether, Prue ran full tilt into them, and caught the ball brilliantly high up in her left hand, and her mother said, haven't they come back yet?
Starting point is 02:41:10 Whereupon the spell was broken. Mr. Ramsey felt free now to laugh out loud at the thought that Hume had stuck in a bog, and an old woman rescued him on, on condition he said the Lord's prayer, and chuckling to himself, he strolled off to his study. Mrs. Ramsey, bringing Prue back into throwing catches again, from which she had escaped, asked, Did Nancy go with them? End of Section 5. Section 6 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf.
Starting point is 02:41:43 This Librefrog's recording is in the public domain. Chapter 14. Certainly Nancy had gone with them, since Minter Doyle had asked it with her dumb look, holding out her hand, as Nancy made off after lunch to Heratic, to escape the horror of family life. She supposed she must go then. She did not want to go. She did not want to be drawn into it all. For, as they walked along the road to the cliff, Minter kept on taking her hand. Then she would let it go. Then she would take it again. What was it she wanted? Nancy asked herself. There was something, of course, that people wanted.
Starting point is 02:42:26 For when Minter took her hand and held it, Nancy, reluctantly, saw the whole world spread out beneath her, as if it were Constantinople seen through a mist, and then, however heavy-eyed one might be, one must needs ask, is that Santa Sophia? Is that the golden horn? So Nancy asked when Minter took her hand, what is it that she wants? Is it that? And what was that? Here and there emerged from the mist, as Nancy looked down upon life spread beneath her, a pinnacle, a dome, prominent things without names. But when Minter dropped her hand, as she did when they ran down the hillside, all that, the dome, the pinnacle, whatever it was that had protruded through the mist, sank down into it and disappeared.
Starting point is 02:43:19 Minter, Andrew observed, was rather a good war. She wore more sensible clothes than most women. She wore very short skirts and black knickerbockers. She would jump straight into a stream and flounder across. He liked her rashness, but he saw that it would not do. She would kill herself in some idiotic way one of these days. She seemed to be afraid of nothing, except bulls. At the mere sight of a bull in a field,
Starting point is 02:43:48 she would throw up her arms and flies screaming, which was the very thing to enrageable, of course. But she did not mind owning up to it in the least, one must admit that. She knew she was an awful coward about bulls, she said. She thought she must have been tossed in her perambulator when she was a baby. She didn't seem to mind what she said or did. Suddenly now, she pitched down on the edge of the cliff and began to sing some song about,
Starting point is 02:44:18 Damn your eyes, damn your eyes. They all had to join in and sing the chorus and shout out together. Damn your eyes! Damn your eyes! But it would be fatal to let the tide come in and cover up all the good hunting grounds before they got onto the beach. Fatal, Paul agreed, springing up, and as they went slithering down, he kept quoting the guidebook about, these islands being justly celebrated for their park-like prospects,
Starting point is 02:44:47 and the extent and variety of their marine curiosities. But it would not do altogether, this shouting and damning your eyes, Andrew felt, picking his way down the cliff, this clapping him on the back and calling him, old fellow, and all that. It would not altogether do. It was the worst of taking women on walks. Once on the beach they separated, he going out onto the Pope's nose, taking his shoes off and rolling his socks in them, and letting that couple look after themselves.
Starting point is 02:45:20 Nancy waded out to her own rocks and searched her own pools, and let that couple look after themselves. She crouched low down and touched the smooth rubber-like sea-anemones, who were stuck like lumps of jelly to the side of the rock. Brooding she changed the pool into the sea, and made the minnows into sharks and whales, and cast vast clouds over this tiny world by holding her hand against the sun, and so brought darkness and desolation, like God himself, to millions of ignorant and innocent creatures, and then took her hand away suddenly and let the sun stream down. Out on the pale, criss-crossed sand, high-stepping,
Starting point is 02:46:04 fringed, gaudleted, stalked some fantastic leviathan, she was still enlarging the pool, and slipped into the vast fissures of the mountainside. And then, letting her eyes slide in perceptive, above the pool, and rest on that wavering line of sea and sky, on the tree trunks which the smoke of steamers made waver on the horizon. She became with all that power sweeping savagely in and inevitably withdrawing, hypnotised, and the two senses of that vastness and this tininess, the pool had diminished again, flowering within it, made her feel that she was bound, hand and foot, and unable to move by the intensity of feelings which reduced her own body, her own life, and the lives of all the people in the world, forever, to nothingness.
Starting point is 02:46:55 So, listening to the waves, crouching over the pool, she brooded. And Andrew shouted that the sea was coming in, so she leapt splashing through the shallow waves onto the shore, and ran up the beach and was carried by her own impetuosity, and her desire for rapid movement right behind a rock. And there, oh heavens, in each other's arms, were Paul and Minta kissing probably. She was outraged, indignant.
Starting point is 02:47:24 She and Andrew put on their shoes and stockings in dead silence without saying a thing about it. Indeed, they were rather sharp with each other. She might have called him when she saw the crayfish or whatever it was, Andrew grumbled. However, they both felt, it's not our fault. They had not wanted this horrid nuisance to happen. All the same it is. irritated Andrew that Nancy should be a woman, and Nancy that Andrew should be a man,
Starting point is 02:47:52 and they tied their shoes very neatly and drew the bows rather tight. It was not until they had climbed right up onto the top of the cliff again, that Minter cried out that she had lost her grandmother's brooch, her grandmother's brooch, the sole ornament she possessed, a weeping willow. It was, they must remember it, set in pearls. They must have seen it, she said, with the tears, running down her cheeks, the brooch which her grandmother had fastened her cap with till the last day of her life. Now she had lost it. She would rather have lost anything than that. She would go back
Starting point is 02:48:31 and look for it. They all went back. They poked and peered and looked. They kept their heads very low and said things shortly and gruffly. Paul Rayleigh searched like a madman all about the rock where they had been sitting. All this pother about a brooch really didn't do at all, Andrew thought, as Paul told him to make a thorough search between this point and that. The tide was coming in fast. The sea would cover the place where they had sat in a minute. There was not a ghost of a chance of their finding it now.
Starting point is 02:49:07 We shall be cut off, Minter shrieked, suddenly terrified, as if there were any danger of that. It was the same as the balls all over again. She had no control over her emotions, Andrew thought. Women hadn't. The wretched Paul had to pacify her. The men, Andrew and Paul at once became manly and different from usual, took counsel briefly and decided that they would plant Rayleigh's stick where they had sat and come back at low tide again.
Starting point is 02:49:40 There was nothing more that could be done now. If the brooch was there, it would still. be there in the morning, they assured her, but Minter still sobbed all the way up to the top of the cliff. It was her grandmother's brooch. She would rather have lost anything but that. And yet Nancy felt it might be true that she minded losing her brooch, but she wasn't crying only for that. She was crying for something else. We might all sit down and cry, she felt, but she did not know what They drew ahead together, Paul and Minter, and he comforted her and said how famous he was for finding things. Once, when he was a little boy, he had found a gold watch. He would get up at
Starting point is 02:50:27 daybreak, and he was positive he would find it. It seemed to him that it would be almost dark, and he would be alone on the beach, and somehow it would be rather dangerous. He began telling her, however, that he would certainly find it, and she said that she would not hear of his getting up at dawn. It was lost. She knew that. She had had a presentiment when she put it on that afternoon. And secretly he resolved that he would not tell her, but he would slip out of the house at dawn when they were all asleep, and if he could not find it, he would go to Edinburgh and buy her another, just like it but more beautiful. He would prove what he could do. as they came out on the hill and saw the lights of the town beneath them.
Starting point is 02:51:13 The lights coming out suddenly one by one seemed like things that were going to happen to him, his marriage, his children, his house. And again he thought, as they came out onto the high road, which was shaded with high bushes, how they would retreat into solitude together, and walk on and on, he always leading her, and she pressing close to his side as she did now. As they turned by the crossroads, he thought what an appalling experience he had been through,
Starting point is 02:51:45 and he must tell someone, Mrs. Ramsey, of course, for it took his breath away to think what he had been and done. It had been far and away the worst moment of his life when he asked Minter to marry him. He would go straight to Mrs. Ramsey, because he felt somehow that she was the person who had made him do it. She had made him think he could do anything. Nobody else to her. him seriously. But she made him believe that he could do whatever he wanted. He had felt her eyes on him all day to day, following him about, though she never said a word, as if she was saying, yes, you can do it. I believe in you, I expect it of you. She had made him feel all that, and directly they got back. He looked for the lights of the house above the bay. He would go to her
Starting point is 02:52:37 and say, I've done it, Mrs. Ramsey, thanks to you. And so, turning into the lane that led to the house, he could see lights moving about in the upper windows. They must be awfully late then. People were getting ready for dinner. The house was all lit up, and the lights after the darkness made his eyes feel full, and he said to himself, childishly,
Starting point is 02:53:00 as he walked up the drive, lights, lights, lights, and repeated in a dazed way. "'lights, lights, lights, lights, "'as they came into the house, "'staring about him with his face quite stiff. "'But, good heavens,' he said to himself, "'putting his hand to his tie,
Starting point is 02:53:20 "'I must not make a fool of myself.' "'Chapter fifteen.' "'Yes,' said Prue in her considering way, "'answering her mother's question. "'I think Nancy did go with them.' "'Chapter sixteen. "'Well then, Nancy had gone with them.' them, Mrs. Ramsey supposed, wondering, as she put down a brush, took up a comb and said,
Starting point is 02:53:48 come in, to a tap at the door, Jasper and Rose came in. Whether the fact that Nancy was with them made it less likely or more likely that anything would happen. It made it less likely somehow, Mrs. Ramsey thought, very irrationally, except that after all, holocaust on such a scale was not probable. They could not all be drowned. And again she felt alone in the present, of her old antagonist, life. Jasper and Rose said that Mildred wanted to know whether she should wait dinner. Not for the Queen of England, said Mrs. Ramsey emphatically.
Starting point is 02:54:25 Not for the Empress of Mexico, she added, laughing at Jasper, for he shared his mother's vice. He too exaggerated. And if Rose liked, she said, while Jasper took the message, she might choose which jewels she was to wear. When there are 15 people sitting down to dinner, one cannot keep things waiting forever. She was now beginning to feel annoyed with them for being so late. It was inconsiderate of them, and it annoyed her on top of her anxiety about them, that they should choose this very night to be out late,
Starting point is 02:54:59 when in fact she wished the dinner to be particularly nice, since William Banks had at last consented to dine with them, and they were having Mildred's masterpiece, Bufon Dobb. Everything depended upon. things being served up to the precise moment they were ready. The beef, the bay leaf and the wine, all must be done to a turn. To keep it waiting was out of the question. Yet of course tonight, of all nights, out they went, and they came in late, and things had to be sent out, things had to be kept hot. The buff on Dob will be entirely spoiled. Jasper offered her an
Starting point is 02:55:36 opal necklace, rose a gold necklace, which looked best against her black, dress. Which did indeed, said Mrs. Ramsey absent-mindedly, looking at her neck and shoulders, but avoiding her face in the glass. And then, while the children rummaged among her things, she looked out of the window at a sight which always amused her, the rooks trying to decide which tree to settle on. Every time they seemed to change their minds and rose up into the air again, because, she thought, the old rook, the father rook, old Joseph was her name for him, was a bird of a very trying and difficult disposition. He was a disreputable old bird, with half his wing feathers missing.
Starting point is 02:56:21 He was like some seedy old gentleman in a top hat she had seen playing the horn in front of a public house. Look, she said, laughing. They were actually fighting. Joseph and Mary were fighting. anyhow they all went up again and the air was shoved aside by their black wings and cut into exquisite scimitar shapes. The movements of the wings beating out, out, out, she could never describe it accurately enough to please herself, was one of the loveliest of all to her. Look at that, she said to Rose, hoping that Rose would see it more clearly than she could.
Starting point is 02:56:59 For one's children so often gave one's own perceptions a little thrust forwards. But which was it to be? They had all the trays of her jewel case open. The gold necklace, which was Italian, or the opal necklace, which Uncle James had brought her from India, or should she wear her amethysts? Choose, dearest, choose, she said, hoping that they would make haste. But she let them take their time to choose. She let Rose, particularly, take up this and then that,
Starting point is 02:57:30 and hold her jewels against the black dress, for this little ceremony of choosing jewels, which was gone through every night, was what Rose liked best she knew. She had some hidden reason of her own for attaching great importance to this choosing what her mother was to wear. What was the reason, Mrs. Ramsey wondered,
Starting point is 02:57:51 standing still to let her clasp the necklace she had chosen, divining, through her own past, some deep, some buried, some quite speechless feeling that one had for one's mother at Rose's age. Like all feelings felt for oneself, Mrs. Ramsey thought, it made one sad. It was so inadequate what one could give in return, and what Rose felt was quite out of proportion to anything she actually was. And Rose would grow up, and Rose would suffer, she supposed, with these deep feelings,
Starting point is 02:58:25 and she said she was ready now, and they would go down, and Jasper, because he was the gentleman, should give her his arm, and Rose, as she was the lady, should carry her handkerchief. She gave her the handkerchief. And what else? Oh, yes, it might be cold, a shawl. Choose me a shawl, she said, for that would please, Rose, who was bound to suffer so. There, she said, stopping by the window on the landing.
Starting point is 02:58:52 There they are again. Joseph had settled on another treetop. "'Don't you think they mind?' she said to Jasper, having their wings broken. "'Why did he want to shoot, poor old Joseph and Mary?' He shuffled a little on the stairs and felt rebuked, but not seriously, for she did not understand the fun of shooting birds. And they did not feel, and being his mother she lived away in another division of the world, but he rather liked her stories about Mary and Joseph.
Starting point is 02:59:24 She made him laugh. But how did she know that those were Mary and Joseph? Did she think the same birds came to the same trees every night? he asked. But here, suddenly, like all grown-up people, she ceased to pay him the least attention. She was listening to a clatter in the hall. They've come back, she exclaimed, and at once she felt much more annoyed with them than relieved. Then she wondered, had it happened. She would go down and they would tell her, but no, they could not tell her anything with all these people about.
Starting point is 03:00:02 So she must go down and begin dinner and wait. And, like some queen who, finding her people gathered in the hall, looks down upon them and descends among them, and acknowledges their tributes silently, and accepts their devotion and their prostration before her. Paul did not move a muscle but looked straight before him as she passed. She went down and crossed the hall And bowed her head very slightly As if she accepted what they could not say Their tribute to her beauty
Starting point is 03:00:33 But she stopped There was a smell of burning Could they have led the Bourfondob Overboil, she wondered Pray heaven not When the great clangor of the gong announced solemnly, authoritatively That all those scattered about
Starting point is 03:00:49 In attics, in bedrooms on little perches of their own, reading, writing, putting the last smooth to their hair, or fastening dresses, must leave all that, and the little odds and ends on their washing tables and dressing tables, and the novels on the bed tables, and the diaries which were so private, and assemble in the dining room for dinner. End of Section 6. Section 7 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librefrog's recording is in the public domain.
Starting point is 03:01:25 "'Chapter seventeen. "'But what have I done with my life?' thought Mrs. Ramsey, "'taking her place at the head of the table, "'and looking at all the plates, making white circles on it. "'William, sit by me,' she said. "'Lilly,' she said, wearily, over there.' "'They had that, Paul Rayleigh and Minter Doyle, "'she, only this, an infinitely long table and plates and knives.
Starting point is 03:01:54 At the far end was her husband, sitting down, all in a heap, frowning. What at? She did not know. She did not mind. She could not understand how she had ever felt any emotion or affection for him. She had a sense of being past everything, through everything, out of everything, as she held the soup, as if there was an eddy, there, and one could be in it or one could be out of it, and she was out of it. "'It's all come to an end,' she thought,
Starting point is 03:02:28 "'while they came in one after another. "'Charles Tansley. "'Sit there, please,' she said, "'Augustus Carmichael and sat down. "'And meanwhile she waited, "'passively, for someone to answer her, "'for something to happen. "'But this is not a thing,' she thought,
Starting point is 03:02:48 "'ladling out soup that one says. "' Raising her eyebrows at the discrepancy, that was what she was thinking, this was what she was doing, ladling out soup. She felt, more and more strongly, outside that eddy, or as if a shade had fallen and robbed of colour, she saw things truly. The room, she looked round it, was very shabby. There was no beauty anywhere. She forbore to look at Mr. Tansley.
Starting point is 03:03:19 Nothing seemed to have merged. They all sat separate. And the whole effort of merging and flowing and creating rested on her. Again she felt, as a fact without hostility, the sterility of men, for if she did not do it, nobody would do it. And so, giving herself a little shake that one gives a watch that has stopped, the old familiar pulse began beating, as the watch begins ticking. One, two, three, one, two, three.
Starting point is 03:03:52 And so on and so on, she repeated, listening to it, sheltering and fostering the still feeble pulse as one might guard a weak flame with a newspaper. And so then, she concluded, addressing herself by bending silently in his direction to William Banks, poor man, who had no wife and no children, and dined alone in lodgings except for tonight, and in pity for him, life being now strong enough to bear her up. again. She began all this business, as a sailor not without weariness sees the wind fill his sail, and yet hardly wants to be off again, and thinks how, had the ship sunk, he would have whirled round and round and found rest on the floor of the sea. Did you find your letters? I told them
Starting point is 03:04:41 to put them in the hall for you, she said to William Banks. Lily Briscoe watched her drifting into that strange no-man's land, where to follow people is impossible. and yet their going inflicts such a chill on those who watch them, that they always try at least to follow them with their eyes, as one follows a fading ship until the sails have sunk beneath the horizon. How old she looks, how worn she looks, Lily thought, and how remote. Then, when she turned to William Banks, smiling, it was as if the ship had turned and the sun had struck its sails again,
Starting point is 03:05:19 and Lily thought, with some amusement, because she was relieved, why does she pity him? For that was the impression she gave when she told him that his letters were in the hall. Poor William Banks, she seemed to be saying, as if her own weariness had been partly pitying people, and the life in her, her resolve to live again, had been stirred by pity. And it was not true, Lily thought. It was one of those misjudgments of hers that seemed to be instinctive. and to arise from some need of her own rather than of other peoples. He is not in the least pitiable.
Starting point is 03:05:57 He has his work, Lily said to herself. She remembered, all of a sudden, as if she had found a treasure, that she had her work. In a flash she saw her picture and thought, Yes, I shall put the tree further in the middle, then I shall avoid that awkward space. That's what I shall do. That's what has been puzzling me. She took up the salt cellar and put it down again on a flower pattern in the tablecloth, so as to remind herself to move the tree.
Starting point is 03:06:29 It's odd that one scarcely gets anything worth having by post, yet one always wants one's letters, said Mr Banks. What damned rot they talk, thought Charles Tansley, laying down his spoon precisely in the middle of his plate, which he had swept clean, as if, Lily thought, he sat opposite to her, with his back to the window precisely in the middle of view. He would determine to make sure of his meals. Everything about him had that meagre fixity, that bare unloveliness.
Starting point is 03:07:01 But nevertheless, the fact remained. It was impossible to dislike anyone if one looked at them. She liked his eyes. They were blue, deep set, frightening. Do you write many letters, Mr. Tansley? asked Mrs. Ramsey, pitying him too, Lily supposed. For that was true of Mrs. Ramsey. She pitied men always as if they lacked something.
Starting point is 03:07:25 Women never, as if they had something. He wrote to his mother, otherwise he did not suppose he wrote one letter a month, said Mr. Tansley shortly. For he was not going to talk the sort of rut these condescended to by these silly women. He had been reading in his room, and now he came down and it all seemed, seemed to him silly, superficial, flimsy. Why did they dress? He had come down in his ordinary clothes.
Starting point is 03:07:55 He had not got any dress clothes. One never gets anything worth having by post. That was the sort of thing they were always saying. They made men say that sort of thing. Yes, it was pretty well true, he thought. They never got anything worth having from one year's end to another. They did nothing but talk, talk, talk, eat, eat. It was the women's fault.
Starting point is 03:08:21 Women made civilization impossible with all their charm, all their silliness. No going to the lighthouse tomorrow, Mrs. Ramsey, he said, asserting himself. He liked her. He admired her. He still thought of the man in the drainpipe looking up at her, but he felt it necessary to assert himself. He was really. Lily Briscoe thought, in spite of his eyes.
Starting point is 03:08:47 But then look at his nose, look at his hands, the most uncharming human being she had ever met. Then why did she mind what he said? Women can't write, women can't paint. What did that matter coming from him? Since clearly it was not true to him, but for some reason helpful to him, and that was why he said it.
Starting point is 03:09:10 Why did her whole being bow, like corn under a wind, and erect itself again from this abasement only with a great and rather painful effort. She must make it once more. There's the sprake on the tablecloth. There's my painting. I must move the tree to the middle. That matters, nothing else. Could she not hold fast to that?
Starting point is 03:09:33 She asked herself, and not lose her temper and not argue. And if she wanted revenge, take it by laughing at him. Oh, Mr. Tansley, she said. "'Do take me to the lighthouse with you. I should so love it.' She was telling lies he could see. She was saying what she did not mean to annoy him for some reason. She was laughing at him. He was in his old flannel trousers. He had no others. He felt very rough and isolated and lonely. He knew that she was trying to tease him for some reason. She didn't want to go to the lighthouse with him. She despised him. So did Prue round.
Starting point is 03:10:14 So did they all. But he was not going to be made a fool of by women, so he turned deliberately in his chair and looked out of the window, and said, all in a jerk, very rudely, it would be too rough for her tomorrow. She would be sick. It annoyed him that she should have made him speak like that, with Mrs. Ramsey listening.
Starting point is 03:10:36 If only he could be alone in his room working, he thought, among his books. That was where he felt at his ease. And he had never run a penny into debt. He had never cost his father a penny since he was fifteen. He had helped them at home out of his savings. He was educating his sister. Still, he wished he had known how to answer Miss Briscoe properly. He wished it had not come out all in a jerk like that.
Starting point is 03:11:03 You'd be sick. He wished he could think of something to say to Mrs. Ramsey, something which would show her that he was not just a dry prig. That was what they all thought about. him. He turned to her. But Mrs. Ramsey was talking about people he had never heard of to William Banks. "'Yes, take it away,' she said briefly, interrupting what she was saying to William Banks to speak to the maid. "'It must have been fifteen, no, twenty years ago, that I last saw her,' she was saying, turning back to him again as if she could not lose a moment of their talk, for she was absorbed by
Starting point is 03:11:41 what they were saying. So he had actually heard from her this evening, and was Carrie still living at Marlowe, and was everything still the same? Oh, she could remember it as if it were yesterday, on the river, feeling it as if it were yesterday, going on the river, feeling very cold. But if the mannings made a plan, they stuck to it. Never should she forget Herbert killing a wasp with a teaspoon on the bank. And it was still going on, Mrs. Ramsey mused, gliding like a ghost among the chairs and tables of that drawing-room on the banks of the Thames where she had been so very, very cold twenty years ago. But now she went among them like a ghost, and it fascinated her, as if, while she had changed, that particular day, now become very still and beautiful, had remained there all these years. Had Carrie written to him herself, she asked.
Starting point is 03:12:38 Yes, she says they're building a new billiard-room. he said. No, no, that was out of the question. Building a new billiard room. It seemed to her impossible. Mr. Banks could not see that there was anything very odd about it. They were very well off now. Should he give her love to carry?
Starting point is 03:12:58 Oh, said Mrs. Ramsey with a little start. No, she added, reflecting that she did not know this Carrie who built a new billiard room. But how strange, she repeated, to Mr Banks's amusement that they should be going on there still. For it was extraordinary to think that they had been capable of going on living all these years when she had not thought of them more than once all that time. How eventful her own life had been during those same years.
Starting point is 03:13:28 Yet perhaps Carrie Manning had not thought about her either. The thought was strange and distasteful. People soon drift apart, said Mr. Banks, feeling, however, some satisfaction, when he thought that after all he knew both the Mannings and the Ramseys. He had not drifted apart, he thought, laying down his spoon and wiping his clean-shaven lips punctiliously. But perhaps he was rather unusual, he thought, in this.
Starting point is 03:13:58 He never let himself get into a groove. He had friends in all circles. Mrs. Ramsey had to break off here to tell the maid something about keeping food hot. That was why he preferred dining alone. All those interruptions annoyed him. Well, thought William Banks, preserving a demeanour of exquisite courtesy and merely spreading the fingers of his left hand on the tablecloth as a mechanic examined a tool beautifully polished and ready for use in an interval of leisure,
Starting point is 03:14:29 such are the sacrifices one's friends ask of one. It would have hurt her if he had refused to come, but it was not worth it for him. Looking at his hand, he thought that, if he had been alone, dinner would have been almost over now, he would have been free to work. Yes, he thought, it is a terrible waste of time. The children were dropping in still. I wish one of you would run up to Rogers' room, Mrs. Ramsey was saying. How trifling it all is, how boring it all is, he thought, compared with the other thing, work.
Starting point is 03:15:09 Here he sat drumming his fingers on the tablecloth when he might have been. He took a flashing bird's-eye view of his work. What a waste of time it all was to be sure. Yet, he thought, she is one of my oldest friends. I am by way of being devoted to her. Yet now, at this moment, her presence meant absolutely nothing to him. Her beauty meant nothing to him. Her sitting with her little boy at the window,
Starting point is 03:15:39 nothing, nothing. He wished only to be alone and to take up that book. He felt uncomfortable. He felt treacherous, that he could sit by her side and feel nothing for her. The truth was that he did not enjoy family life. It was in this sort of state that one asked oneself, what does one live for? Why, one asked oneself,
Starting point is 03:16:05 does one take all these pains for the human race to go on? Is it so very desirable? Are we attractive as a species? Not so very, he thought, looking at those rather untidy boys. His favourite, Cam, was in bed, he supposed. Foolish questions, vain questions, questions one never asked if one was occupied. Is human life this? Is human life that?
Starting point is 03:16:35 One never had time to think about it. But here he was asking himself that sort of question, because Mrs. Ramsey was giving orders to servants, and also because it had struck him, thinking how surprised Mrs. Ramsey was that Carrie Manning's should still exist, that friendships, even the best of them, are frail things. One drifts apart. He reproached himself again. He was sitting beside Mrs. Ramsey, and he had nothing in the world to say to her. "'I'm so sorry,' said Mrs. Ramsey, turning to him at last. He felt rigid and barren, like a pair of boots that have been soaked and gone dry so that you can hardly force your feet into them.
Starting point is 03:17:21 Yet he must force his feet into them. He must make himself talk. Unless he were very careful, she would find out this treachery of his, that he did not care a straw for her, and that would not be at all pleasant, he thought. So he bent his head courteously in her direction. How you must detest dining in this bear garden, she said, making use, as she did when she was distracted of her social manner. So, when there is a strife of tongues at some meeting, the chairman, to obtain unity, suggests that everyone shall speak in French. Perhaps it is bad French. French may not contain the words that express the speaker's thoughts.
Starting point is 03:18:04 nevertheless speaking French imposes some order, some uniformity. Replying to her in the same language, Mr. Banks said, No, not at all. And Mr. Tansley, who had no knowledge of this language, even spoke thus in words of one syllable, at once suspected its insincerity. They did talk nonsense, he thought, the Ramses, and he pounced on this fresh instance with joy,
Starting point is 03:18:32 making a note which, one of these days, he would read aloud to one or two friends. There, in a society where one could say what one liked, he would sarcastically describe staying with the Ramses, and what nonsense they talked. It was worthwhile doing it once, he would say, but not again. The women bored one, so, he would say. Of course Ramsey had dished himself by marrying a beautiful woman and having eight children.
Starting point is 03:19:04 It would shape itself something like that. But now, at this moment, sitting stuck there with an empty seat beside him, nothing had shaped itself at all. It was all in scraps and fragments. He felt extremely, even physically uncomfortable. He wanted somebody to give him a chance of asserting himself. He wanted it so urgently that he fidgeted in his chair, looked at this person, then at that part.
Starting point is 03:19:31 person, tried to break into their talk, opened his mouth and shut it again. They were talking about the fishing industry. Why did nobody ask him his opinion? What did they know about the fishing industry? Lily Briscoe knew all that. Sitting opposite him, could she not see, as in an x-ray photograph, the ribs and thigh bones of the young man's desire to impress himself, lying dark in the mist of his flesh, that thin mist which convention had laid over his burning desire to break into the conversation. But, she thought, screwing up her Chinese eyes, and remembering how he sneered at women, can't paint, can't write, why should I help him relieve himself? There is a code of behaviour, she knew, whose seventh article, it may be,
Starting point is 03:20:24 says that on occasions of this sort it behoves the woman, whatever her own occupation might be, to go to the help of the young man opposite, so that he may expose and relieve the thigh-bones, the ribs of his vanity, of his urgent desire to assert himself. As indeed it is their duty, she reflected, in her old maidenly fairness,
Starting point is 03:20:46 to help us, suppose the tube were to burst into flames. Then, she thought, I should certainly expect Mr Tansley to get, get me out. But how would it be, she thought, if neither of us did either of those things? So she sat there smiling. You're not planning to go to the lighthouse, are you, Lily? said Mrs. Ramsey. Remember poor Mr. Langley. He had been round the world dozens of times, but he told me he never suffered as he did when my husband took him there. Are you a good sailor, Mr. Tansley?
Starting point is 03:21:20 She asked. Mr. Tansley raised a hammer. swung it high in air, but realizing, as it descended, that he could not smite that butterfly with such an instrument as this, said only that he had never been sick in his life. But in that one sentence lay compact, like a gunpowder, that his grandfather was a fisherman, his father a chemist, that he had worked his way up entirely himself, that he was proud of it, that he was Charles Tansley, a fact that nobody there seemed to realize, But one of these days every single person would know it. He scowled ahead of him.
Starting point is 03:22:00 He could almost pity these mild, cultivated people who would be blown sky-high like bales of wool and barrels of apples, one of these days by the gunpowder that was in him. "'Will you take me, Mr. Tansley?' said Lily quickly, kindly, for of course, if Mrs. Ramsey said to her, as in effect she did, I am drowning, my dear, in seas of fire. Unless you apply some balm to the anguish of this hour and say something nice to that young man there,
Starting point is 03:22:30 life will run upon the rocks. Indeed, I hear the grating and the growling at this minute. My nerves are as taut as fiddle-strings. Another touch, and they will snap. When Mrs. Ramsey said all this, as the glance in her eyes said it, of course, for the hundred and fiftyth time, Lily Briscoe had to renounce the experiment.
Starting point is 03:22:50 what happens if one is not nice to that young man there, and be nice? Judging the turn in her mood correctly, that she was friendly to him now. He was relieved of his egotism, and told her how he had been thrown out of a boat when he was a baby, how his father used to fish him out with a boat-hook. That was how he had learned to swim. One of his uncles kept the light on some rock or other off the Scottish coast, he said. He had been there with him in a storm. This was said loudly in a pause.
Starting point is 03:23:24 They had to listen to him when he said that he had been with his uncle in a lighthouse in a storm. Ah, thought Lily Briscoe, as the conversation took this auspicious turn, and she felt Mrs. Ramsey's gratitude, for Mrs. Ramsey was free now to talk for a moment herself. Ah, she thought, but what haven't I paid to get it for you? She had not been sincere. She had done the usual job. trick, being nice. She would never know him, he would never know her. Human relations were all like
Starting point is 03:23:58 that, she thought, and the worst, if it had not been for Mr. Banks, were between men and women. Inevitably these were extremely insincere, she thought. Then her eye caught the saltseller, which she had placed there to remind her, and she remembered that next morning she would move the tree further towards the middle, and her spirits rose so hard. high at the thought of painting tomorrow, that she laughed out loud at what Mr. Tanzali was saying. Let him talk all night if he liked it. But how long do they leave men on a lighthouse? She asked.
Starting point is 03:24:33 He told her. He was amazingly well informed. And as he was grateful, and as he liked her, and as he was beginning to enjoy himself. So now, Mrs. Ramsey thought, she could return to that dreamland, that unreal but fascinating. place, the Manning's drawing-room at Marlowe 20 years ago, where one moved about without haste or anxiety, for there was no future to worry about. She knew what had happened to them, what to her. It was like reading a good book again, for she knew the end of that story, since it had happened 20 years ago, and life, which shot down even from this dining-room table
Starting point is 03:25:15 in cascades, heaven knows where, was sealed up there, and lay like a lake placidly between its banks. He said they had built a billiard room. Was it possible? Would William go on talking about the mannings? She wanted him to. But no, for some reason he was no longer in the mood. She tried. He did not respond. She could not force him. She was disappointed. The children are disgraceful, she said, sighing. He said something about punctuality being one of the minor virtues which we do not acquire until later in life. If at all, said Mrs. Ramsey, merely to fill up space, thinking what an old maid William was becoming. Conscious of his treachery, conscious of her wish to talk about something more intimate,
Starting point is 03:26:09 yet out of mood for it at present, he felt come over him the disagreeableness of life, sitting there, waiting. Perhaps the others were saying something interesting. What were they saying? That the fishing season was bad, that the men were emigrating. They were talking about wages and unemployment. The young man was abusing the government. William Banks, thinking what a relief it was to catch on to something of this sort
Starting point is 03:26:38 when private life was disagreeable, heard him say something about, one of the most scandalous acts of the present government. Lily was listening, Mrs. Ramsey was listening, they were all listening. But, already bored, Lily felt that something was lacking. Mr. Banks felt that something was lacking. Pulling her shawl round her, Mrs. Ramsey felt that something was lacking. All of them bending themselves to listen, thought, Pray heaven that the inside of my mind may not be exposed,
Starting point is 03:27:11 for each thought the others are feeling this they are outraged and indignant with the government about the fishermen whereas I feel nothing at all but perhaps thought Mr Banks as he looked at Mr. Tansley
Starting point is 03:27:26 here is the man one was always waiting for the man there was always a chance at any moment the leader might arise the man of genius in politics as in anything else "'Probably he will be extremely disagreeable to us old fogies,' thought Mr. Banks, "'doing his best to make allowances, for he knew by some curious physical sensation,
Starting point is 03:27:51 "'as of nerves erect in his spine, that he was jealous, for himself partly, "'partly more probably for his work, for his point of view, for his science, "'and therefore he was not entirely open-minded or altogether fair, for Mr. Tansley seemed to be saying, You have wasted your lives. You are all of you wrong. Poor old Fogies, you're hopelessly behind the times. He seemed to be rather cocksure, this young man,
Starting point is 03:28:21 and his manners were bad. But Mr. Banks bade himself observe. He had courage. He had ability. He was extremely well up in the facts. Probably, Mr. Banks thought, as Tansley abused the government, there is a good deal in what he says. Tell me now, he said.
Starting point is 03:28:43 So they argued about politics, and Lily looked at the leaf on the tablecloth, and Mrs. Ramsey, leaving the argument entirely in the hands of the two men, wondered why she was so bored by this talk, and wished, looking at her husband at the other end of the table, that he would say something. One word, she said to herself, For if he said a thing, it would make all the difference. He went to the heart of things.
Starting point is 03:29:11 He cared about fishermen and their wages. He could not sleep for thinking of them. It was altogether different when he spoke. One did not feel then, pray heaven you don't see how little I care, because one did care. Then, realizing that it was because she admired him so much that she was waiting for him to speak,
Starting point is 03:29:34 she felt as if somebody had been praising her husband to her and her marriage, and she glowed all over without realizing that it was she herself who had praised him. She looked at him, thinking to find this in his face, he would be looking magnificent, but not in the least. He was screwing his face up. He was scowling and frowning and flushing with anger. What on earth was it about, she wondered. What could be the matter?
Starting point is 03:30:04 Only that poor old Augustus had asked for another plate of soup, that was all. It was unthinkable, it was detestable, so he signalled to her across the table, that Augustus should be beginning his soup over again. He loathed people eating when he had finished. She saw his anger fly like a pack of hounds into his eyes, his brow, and she knew that in a moment something violent would explode, and then, Thank goodness. She saw him clutch himself and clap a brake on the wheel, and the whole of his body seemed to emit sparks, but not words. He sat there scowling. He had said nothing. He would
Starting point is 03:30:46 have her observe. Let her give him the credit for that. But why, after all, should poor Augustus not ask for another plate of soup? He had merely touched Ellen's arm and said, "'Ellen, please, another plate of soup.' "'And then Mr. Ramsey scowled like that.' "'And why not?' Mrs. Ramsey demanded. "'Surely they could let Augustus have his soup if he wanted it. "'He hated people wallowing in food,' Mr. Ramsey frowned at her. "'He hated everything dragging on for hours like this.'
Starting point is 03:31:21 "'But he had controlled himself. "'Mr. Ramsey would have her observe, disgusting though the sight was. But why show it so plainly, Mrs. Ramsey demanded. They looked at each other down the long table, sending these questions and answers across, each knowing exactly what the other felt. Everybody could see, Mrs. Ramsey thought. There was Rose gazing at her father. There was Roger gazing at his father.
Starting point is 03:31:49 Both would be off in spasms of laughter in another second she knew. And so she said promptly. Indeed, it was time. "'Light the candles!' And they jumped up instantly and went and fumbled at the sideboard. "'Why could he never conceal his feelings?' Mrs. Ramsey wondered, and she wondered if Augustus Carmichael had noticed. "'Perhaps he had, perhaps he had not.
Starting point is 03:32:16 "'She could not help respecting the composure with which he sat there, "'drinking his soup. "'If he wanted soup, he asked for soup. "'Whether people laughed at him or were angry with him, He was the same. He did not like her, she knew that, but partly for that very reason she respected him, and looking at him, drinking soup,
Starting point is 03:32:38 very large and calm in the failing light, and monumental and contemplative. She wondered what he did feel then, and why he was always content and dignified, and she thought how devoted he was to Andrew and would call him into his room, and Andrew said, show him things. And there he would lie all day long on the lawn, brooding presumably over his poetry,
Starting point is 03:33:04 till he reminded one of a cat watching birds, and then he clapped his paws together when he had found the word, and her husband said, Poor old Augustus, he's a true poet, which was high praise from her husband. Now eight candles were stood down the table, and after the first stoop the flame stood upright and drew with them into visibility the long table in time. higher, and in the middle a yellow and purple dish of fruit. What had she done with it, Mrs. Ramsey wondered, for Rose's arrangement of the grapes and pears,
Starting point is 03:33:39 of the horny pink-lined shell, of the bananas, made her think of a trophy fetched from the bottom of the sea, of Neptune's banquet, of the bunch that hangs with vine leaves over the shoulder of Bacchus, in some picture, among the leopard skins and the torches lolloping red and gold. Thus brought up suddenly into the light, it seemed possessed of great size and depth. It was like a world in which one could take one's staff and climb hills, she thought, and go down into valleys.
Starting point is 03:34:11 And, to her pleasure, for it brought them into sympathy momentarily, she saw that Augustus too feasted his eyes on the same plate of fruit, plunged in, broke off a bloom here, a tassel there, and returned, after feasting to his heart. That was his way of looking, different from hers, but looking together united them. End of Section 7 Section 8 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Libravox recording is in the public domain. Chapter 17 continued. Now all the candles were lit up, and the faces on both sides of the table were brought
Starting point is 03:34:56 nearer by the candlelight, and composed, as they had. not been in the twilight, into a party round a table, for the night was now shut off by panes of glass, which, far from giving any accurate view of the outside world, rippled it so strangely that here, inside the room, seemed to be order and dry land, there, outside, a reflection in which things waved and vanished waterily. Some change at once went through them all, as if this had really happened, and they were all conscious of making a party together in a hollow on an island, had their common cause against that fluidity out there. Mrs. Ramsey, who had been uneasy, waiting for Paul and Minter to come in, and unable, she felt, to settle to things,
Starting point is 03:35:47 now felt her uneasiness changed to expectation. For now they must come, and Lily Briscoe, trying to analyse the cause of the sudden exhilaration, compared it with that moment on the tennis lawn, when solidity suddenly vanished, and such vast spaces lay between them. And now the same effect was got by the many candles in the sparely furnished room, and the uncurtained windows,
Starting point is 03:36:13 and the bright, mask-like look of faces seen by candlelight. Some weight was taken off them. Anything might happen, she felt. They must come, now, Mrs. Ramsey thought, looking at the door, and, at that instant, Minter Doyle, Paul Rayleigh, and a maid carrying a great dish in her hands, came in together. They were awfully late, they were horribly late, Minter said, as they found their way to different ends of the table. I lost my brooch, my grandmother's brooch, said Minter, with a sound of lamentation in her voice,
Starting point is 03:36:50 and a suffusion in her large brown eyes, looking down, looking up, as she sat by Mr. Ramsey, which roused his chivalry so that he bantered her. How could she be such a goose, he asked, as to scramble about the rocks in jewels? She was by way of being terrified of him. He was so fearfully clever,
Starting point is 03:37:13 and the first night when she had sat by him and he talked about George Elliot, she had been really frightened, for she had left the third volume of Middlemarch in the train, and she never knew what happened in the end. But afterwards she got on perfectly, and made herself out even more ignorant than she was, because he liked telling her she was a fool. And so tonight, directly he laughed at her, she was not frightened.
Starting point is 03:37:40 Besides, she knew, directly she came into the room, that the miracle had happened, she wore her golden haze. Sometimes she had it, sometimes not. She never knew why it came or why it went, or if she had it until she came into the room, and then she knew instantly by the way some man looked at her. Yes, tonight she had it tremendously. She knew that, by the way Mr. Ramsey told her not to be a fool.
Starting point is 03:38:09 She sat beside him, smiling. It must have happened then, thought Mrs. Ramsey. They are engaged. And for a moment she felt what she had never expected to feel again. Jealousy. For he, her husband, felt it too. Minter's glow. He liked these girls, these golden reddish girls,
Starting point is 03:38:33 with something flying, something a little wild and harum-scarum about them, who didn't scrape their hair off, weren't, as he said about poor Lily Briscoe, skimpy. There was some quality which she had herself had not, some lustre, some richness, which attracted him, amused him, led him to make favourites of girls like Minter. They might cut his hair from him, plait him watch-chains, or interrupt him at his work, hailing him, she heard them. Come along, Mr. Ramsey, it's our turn to beat them now. And out he came to play tennis. But indeed she was not jealous, only, now and
Starting point is 03:39:17 then, when she made herself look in her glass, a little resentful that she had grown old, perhaps by her own fault, the bill for the greenhouse and all the rest of it. She was grateful to them for laughing at him. How many pipes have you smoked today, Mr. Ramsey? And so on. Till he seemed a young man, a man very attractive to women, not burdened, not weighed down with the greatness of his labours and the sorrows of the world. and his fame or his failure.
Starting point is 03:39:50 But again as she had first known him, gaunt but gallant, helping her out of a boat, she remembered, with delightful ways like that. She looked at him, and he looked astonishingly young, teasing Minter. For herself. Put it down there, she said, helping the Swiss girl to place gently before her the huge brown pot in which was the Beaufort d'Orbe.
Starting point is 03:40:15 For her own part, she liked her boobie. Paul missed to sit by her. She had kept a place for him. Really, she sometimes thought she liked the boobies best. They did not bother one with their dissertations. How much they missed, after all, these very clever men, how dried up they did become, to be sure. There was something, she thought, as he sat down,
Starting point is 03:40:41 very charming about Paul. His manners were delightful to her, and his sharp-cut nose. and his bright blue eyes. He was so considerate. Would he tell her, now that they were all talking again, what had happened?
Starting point is 03:40:57 We went back to look for Minter's brooch, he said, sitting down by her. We. That was enough. She knew from the effort, the rise in his voice to surmount a difficult word, that it was the first time he had said, we.
Starting point is 03:41:14 We did this, we did that. They'll say that all their lives, she thought, and an exquisite scent of olives and oil and juice rose from the great brown dish, as Martha, with a little flourish, took the cover off. The cook had spent three days over that dish. And she must take great care, Mrs. Ramsey thought, diving into the soft mass, to choose a specially tender piece for William Banks. And she peered into the dish, with its shiny, walls and its confusion of savoury brown and yellow meats, and its bay leaves and its wine,
Starting point is 03:41:52 and thought, this will celebrate the occasion, a curious sense rising in her, at once freakish and tender, of celebrating a festival, as if two emotions were called up in her, one profound, for what could be more serious than the love of man for woman, what more commanding, more impressive, bearing in its bosom the seeds of death. At the same time, these lovers, these people entering into illusion, glittering-eyed, must be danced round with mockery, decorated with garlands. It is a triumph, said Mr. Banks, laying his knife down for a moment. He had eaten attentively. It was rich, it was tender, it was perfectly cooked. How did she manage these things in the depths of the country? he asked.
Starting point is 03:42:43 asked her. She was a wonderful woman. All his love, all his reverence had returned, and she knew it. "'It is a French recipe of my grandmothers,' said Mrs. Ramsey, speaking with a ring of great pleasure in her voice. Of course it was French. What passes for cookery in England is an abomination, they agreed. It is putting cabbages in water. It is roasting meat till it is like leather. It is cutting off the delicious skins of vegetables. In which, said Mr. Banks, all the virtue of the vegetable is contained. And the waste, said Mrs. Ramsey,
Starting point is 03:43:25 a whole French family could live on what an English cook throws away. Spurred on by her sense that William's affection had come back to her, and that everything was all right again, and that her suspense was over, and that now she was free to both triumph and to mock, She laughed. She gesticulated, till Lily thought, how childlike, how absurd she was, sitting up there with all her beauty opened in her again, talking about the skins of vegetables. There was something frightening about her. She was irresistible.
Starting point is 03:44:00 Always she got her own way in the end, Lily thought. Now she had brought this off. Paul and Minter, one might suppose, were engaged. Mr Banks was dining here. She put a spell on them all by wishing, so simply, so directly, and Lily contrasted that abundance with her own poverty of spirit, and supposed that it was partly that belief, for her face was all lit up, without looking young she looked radiant. In this strange, this terrifying thing,
Starting point is 03:44:34 which made Paul Rayleigh sitting at her side all of a tremor, yet abstract, absorbed, silent. Mrs. Ramsey, Lily felt, as she talked about the skins of vegetables, exalted that, worshipped that, held her hands over it to warm them, to protect it, and yet, having brought it all about,
Starting point is 03:44:58 somehow laughed, led her victims, Lily felt, to the altar. It came over her too now, the emotion, the vibration of love. How inconsistened, She waspicuous she felt herself by Paul's side. He glowing, burning, she aloof, satirical. He, bound for adventure.
Starting point is 03:45:21 She moored to the shore. He launched, incautious. She solitary, left out, and, ready to implore a share, if it were a disaster, in his disaster, she said shyly, When did Minter lose her brooch? He smiled the most exquisite smile, veiled by memory, tinged by dreams. He shook his head.
Starting point is 03:45:48 On the beach, he said. I'm going to find it, he said. I'm getting up early. This being kept secret from Minter, he lowered his voice and turned his eyes to where she sat, laughing beside Mr. Ramsey. Lily wanted to protest violently and outrageously her desire to help him, envisaging how in the dawn on the beach she would be the one to pounce on the brooch
Starting point is 03:46:14 half hidden by some stone and thus herself be included among the sailors and adventurers but what did he reply to her offer she actually said with an emotion that she seldom let appear let me come with you and he laughed
Starting point is 03:46:31 he meant yes or no either perhaps but it was not his meaning it was the odd chuckle he gave as if he had said, Throw yourself over the cliff, if you like, I don't care. He turned on her cheek, the heat of love,
Starting point is 03:46:47 its horror, its cruelty, its unscrupulosity. It scorched her, and Lily, looking at Minter, being charming to Mr. Ramsey at the other end of the table, flinched for her, exposed to these fangs,
Starting point is 03:47:02 and was thankful. For at any rate, she said to herself, catching sight of the salt cellar on the pattern. She need not marry, thank heaven. She need not undergo that degradation. She was saved from that dilution. She would move the tree rather more to the middle. Such was the complexity of things. For what happened to her, especially staying with the Ramsey's, was to be made to feel violently two opposite things at the same time. That's what you feel
Starting point is 03:47:35 was one. That's what I feel was the other, and then they fought together in her mind, as now. It is so beautiful, so exciting this love, that I tremble on the verge of it, and offer, quite out of my own habit, to look for a brooch on a beach. Also it is the stupidest, the most barbaric of human passions, and turns a nice young man with a profile like a gems. Paul's was exquisite, into a bully with a crowbar. He was swaggering. He was insolent. In the mile-end road. Yet, she said to herself, from the dawn of time, odes have been sung to love, wreaths heaped and roses. And if you asked nine people out of ten, they would say they wanted nothing but this, love. While the women, judging from her own experience,
Starting point is 03:48:30 would all the time be feeling, this is not what we want. There is nothing more tedious, puerile, and inhumane than this. Yet it is also beautiful and necessary. Well then, well then, she asked, somehow expecting the others to go on with the argument, as if in an argument like this one threw one's own little bolt, which fell short, obviously, and left the others to carry it on. So she listened again to what they were saying, in case they should throw any light upon the question of love. Then, said Mr. Banks, there is that liquid the English call coffee. Oh, coffee, said Mrs. Ramsey.
Starting point is 03:49:14 But it was much rather a question. She was thoroughly roused, Lily could see, and talked very emphatically, of real butter and clean milk. Speaking with warmth and eloquence, she described the iniquity of the English dairy system, and in what state milk was delivered at the door, and was about to prove her charges, for she had gone into the matter, when all round the table, beginning with Andrew in the middle, like a fire leaping from tuft to tuft of furs, her children laughed,
Starting point is 03:49:46 her husband laughed. She was laughed at, fire encircled, and forced to veil her crest, dismount her batteries, and only retaliate by displaying the raillery and ridicule of the table to Mr Banks as an example of what one suffered if one attacked the person. prejudices of the British public. Purposely, however, for she had it on her mind that Lily, who had helped her with Mr. Tansley, was out of things. She exempted her from the rest, said, Lily anyhow, agrees with me. And so drew her in, a little fluttered, a little startled, for she was thinking about love.
Starting point is 03:50:27 They were both out of things, Mrs. Ramsey had been thinking, both Lily and Charles Tansley. Both suffered from the glow of the other two. He, it was clear, felt himself utterly in the cold. No woman would look at him with Paul Rayleigh in the room. Poor fellow. Still, he had his dissertation, the influence of somebody upon something. He could take care of himself. With Lily it was different.
Starting point is 03:50:56 She faded under Minta's glow, became more inconspicuous than ever, in her little grey dress with her little. puckered face and her little Chinese eyes. Everything about her was so small. Yet, thought Mrs. Ramsey, comparing her with Minter, as she claimed her help, for Lily should bear her out, she talked no more about her dairies than her husband did about his boots. He would talk by the hour about his boots. Of the two, Lily at forty will be the better. There was in Lily a thread of something, a flare of something, something of her own which Mrs. Ramsey liked very much indeed, but no man would, she feared. Obviously, not unless it were a much older man, like William Banks.
Starting point is 03:51:45 But then he cared, well, Mrs. Ramsey sometimes thought that he cared, since his wife's death, perhaps for her. He was not in love, of course. It was one of those unclassified affections, of which there are so many. Oh, but nonsense, she thought. William must marry Lily. They have so many things in common. Lily is so fond of flowers. They are both cold and aloof and rather self-sufficing.
Starting point is 03:52:14 She must arrange for them to take a long walk together. Foolishly, she had set them opposite each other. That could be remedied tomorrow. If it were fine, they should go for a picnic. Everything seemed possible, everything seemed right. Just now. But this cannot last, she thought, dissociating herself from the moment while they were all talking about boots. Just now she had reached security.
Starting point is 03:52:43 She hovered like a hawk suspended, like a flag floated in an element of joy, which filled every nerve of her body fully and sweetly, not noisily, solemnly rather, for it arose, she thought, looking at them all eating there, from husband and children and friends, all of which rising in this profound stillness, she was helping William Banks to one very small piece more, and peered into the depths of the earthenware pot, seemed now, for no special reason, to stay there like a smoke, like a fume rising upwards, holding them safe together. Nothing need be said, nothing could be said. There it was, all round them.
Starting point is 03:53:30 It partook, she felt, carefully helping Mr. Banks to a specially tender peace, of eternity. As she had already felt about something different once before that afternoon, there is a coherence in things, a stability. Something, she meant, is immune from change, and shines out, she glanced at the window with its ripple of reflected lights, in the face of the flowing, the fleeting, the spectral, like a ruby, so that again tonight she had the feeling she had once today already, of peace, of rest.
Starting point is 03:54:08 Of such moments, she thought, the thing is made that endures. Yes, she assured William Banks, there is plenty for everybody. "'Andrew,' she said, "'hold your plate lower, or I shall spill it.' The Burfondob was a perfect triumph. "'Here,' she felt, putting the spoon down, "'where one could move or rest, "'could wait now, they were all helped, listening,
Starting point is 03:54:37 "'could then, like a hawk which lapses suddenly "'from its high station, "'florned and sink on laughter easily, "'resting her whole weight upon, what at the other end of the table her husband was saying about the square root of 1,253. That was the number, it seemed, on his watch. What did it all mean? To this day she had no notion. A square root? What was that? Her sons knew. She lent on them. On cubes and square roots. That was what they were talking
Starting point is 03:55:15 about now, on Voltaire and Madame de Stahl, on the character of Napoleon, on the French system of land tenure, on Lord Rosebury, on Crevy's memoirs. She let it uphold her and sustain her this admirable fabric of the masculine intelligence, which ran up and down, crossed this way and that, like iron girders spanning the swaying fabric, upholding the world, so that she could trust herself to it utterly, even shut her eyes, or flicker them for a moment, as a child staring up from its pillow winks at the myriad layers of the leaves of a tree.
Starting point is 03:55:56 Then she woke up. It was still being fabricated. William Banks was praising the Waverley novels. He read one of them every six months, he said. And why should that make Charles Tansley angry? He rushed in, "'All,' thought Mrs. Ramsey, because Prue will not be nice to him, "'and denounced the Waverley novels when he knew nothing about it,
Starting point is 03:56:21 "'nothing about it whatsoever,' Mrs. Ramsey thought, "'observing him rather than listening to what he said. "'She could see how it was from his manner. "'He wanted to assert himself, "'and so it would always be with him, "'till he got his professorship or married his wife, "'and so need not always be saying, "'I, I, I, I.
Starting point is 03:56:41 for that was what his criticism of poor Sir Walter, or perhaps it was Jane Austen, amounted to. I, I, I. He was thinking of himself and the impression he was making, as she could tell by the sound of his voice, and his emphasis and his uneasiness. Success would be good for him. At any rate, they were off again. Now she need not listen. It could not last, she knew.
Starting point is 03:57:11 But at the moment her eyes were so clear that they seemed to go round the table unveiling each of these people and their thoughts and their feelings without effort, like a light stealing underwater so that its ripples and the reeds in it and the minnows balancing themselves and the sudden silent trout
Starting point is 03:57:31 are all it up hanging, trembling. So she saw them, she heard them, but whatever they said had also this quality as if what they said was like the movement of a trout, when, at the same time, one can see the ripple and the gravel, something to the right, something to the left, and the whole is held together. For whereas in active life she would be netting and separating one thing from another, she would be saying she liked the Waverley novels or had not read them, she would be urging herself forward.
Starting point is 03:58:08 Now she said nothing. For the moment she hung. suspended. Ah, but how long do you think it'll last, said somebody. It was as if she had antennae trembling out from her, which, intercepting certain sentences, forced them upon her attention. This was one of them. She scented danger for her husband. A question like that would lead, almost certainly, to something being said which reminded him of his own failure. How long would he be read, he would think at once. William Banks, who was entirely free from all such vanity, laughed, and said he attached
Starting point is 03:58:50 no importance to changes in fashion. Who could tell what was going to last, in literature, or indeed in anything else? Let us enjoy what we do enjoy, he said. His integrity seemed to Mrs. Ramsey quite admirable. He never seemed for a moment to think, but how does this affect me. But then if you had the other temperament, which must have praise, which must have encouragement, naturally you began, and she knew that Mr. Ramsey was beginning, to be uneasy, to want somebody to say, oh, but your work will last, Mr. Ramsey, or something like that. He showed his uneasiness quite clearly now by saying, with some irritation, that, anyhow, Scott, or was it Shakespeare, would last him his.
Starting point is 03:59:41 his lifetime. He said it irritably. Everybody, she thought, felt a little uncomfortable without knowing why. Then Minter Doyle, whose instinct was fine, said bluffly, absurdly, that she did not believe that anyone really enjoyed reading Shakespeare. Mr. Ramsey said grimly, but his mind was turned away again, that very few people liked it as much as they said they did. But, he added, there is considerable merit in some of the plays nevertheless, and Mrs. Ramsey saw that it would be all right for the moment anyhow. He would laugh at Minter, and she, Mrs. Ramsey saw, realising his extreme anxiety about himself,
Starting point is 04:00:26 would, in her own way, see that he was taken care of and praise him somehow or other. But she wished it was not necessary. Perhaps it was her fault that it was necessary. Anyhow, she was free now to listen to what Paul Raleigh was trying to say about books one had read as a boy. They lasted, he said. He had read some of Tolstoy at school. There was one he always remembered, but he had forgotten the name. Russian names were impossible, said Mrs. Ramsey.
Starting point is 04:01:00 Vronsky, said Paul. He remembered that because he always thought it's such a good name for a villain. "'Vronsky,' said Mrs. Ramsey. "'Oh, Anna Karenina!' But that did not take them very far. Books were not in their line. No, Charles Tansley would put them both right in a second about books, but it was also mixed up with,
Starting point is 04:01:24 am I saying the right thing, am I making a good impression? That, after all, one knew more about him than about Tolstoy, whereas what Paul said was about the thing, simply, not himself, nothing else. Like all stupid people, he had a kind of modesty, too, a consideration for what you were feeling, which, once in a way at least, she found attractive.
Starting point is 04:01:51 Now he was thinking, not about himself, or about Tolstoy, but whether she was cold, whether she felt a draught, whether she would like a pair. No, she said, she did not want a pair. Indeed she had been keeping guard over the dish of fruit, without realising it, jealously, hoping that nobody would touch it. Her eyes had been going in and out among the curves and shadows of the fruit, among the rich purples of the lowland grapes, then over the horny ridge of the shell, putting a yellow against a purple, a curved shape against a round shape, without knowing why she did it, or why, every time she did it, she felt more,
Starting point is 04:02:34 and more serene, until, oh, what a pity that they should do it, a hand reached out, took a pair, and spoiled the whole thing. In sympathy she looked at Rose. She looked at Rose sitting between Jasper and Prue. How odd that one's child should do that. How odd to see them sitting there in a row, her children, Jasper, Rose, Prue, Andrew, almost silent. but with some joke of their own going on, she guessed, from the twitching at their lips. It was something quite apart from everything else, something they were hoarding up to laugh over in their own room. It was not about their father, she hoped.
Starting point is 04:03:21 No, she thought not. What was it, she wondered, sadly rather, for it seemed to her that they would laugh when she was not there. There was all that hoarded behind those rather set, Still, mask-like faces, for they did not join in easily. They were like watchers, surveyors, a little raised or set apart from the grown-up people. But when she looked at Prue tonight, she saw that this was not now quite true of her. She was just beginning, just moving, just descending. The faintest light was on her face, as if the glow of Minter opposite,
Starting point is 04:04:01 it, some excitement, some anticipation of happiness was reflected in her, as if the son of the love of men and women rose over the rim of the tablecloth, and without knowing what it was, she bent towards it and greeted it. She kept looking at Minter, shyly yet curiously, so that Mrs. Ramsey looked from one to the other, and said, speaking to Prue in her own mind, you will be as happy as she is one of these days. You will be much happier, she added. Because you are my daughter, she meant. Her own daughter must be happier than other people's daughters.
Starting point is 04:04:40 But dinner was over. It was time to go. They were only playing with things on their plates. She would wait until they had done laughing at some story her husband was telling. He was having a joke with Minter about a bet. Then she would get up. She liked Charles Tansley, she thought suddenly. She liked his laugh.
Starting point is 04:05:03 She liked him for being so angry with Paul and Minter. She liked his awkwardness. There was a lot in that young man after all. And Lily, she thought, putting her napkin beside her plate, she always has some joke of her own. One need never bother about Lily. She waited. She tucked her napkin under the edge of her plate.
Starting point is 04:05:27 Well, were they done now? No. That story had led to another story. Her husband was in great spirits tonight, and wishing, she supposed, to make it all right with old Augustus after that scene about the soup, had drawn him in.
Starting point is 04:05:45 They were telling stories about someone they had both known at college. She looked at the window in which the candle flames burnt brighter now that the panes were black, and looking at that outside, the voices came to her very strangely, as if there were voices at a service in a cathedral,
Starting point is 04:06:01 for she did not listen to the words. The sudden bursts of laughter, and then one voice, Minters, speaking alone, reminded her of men and boys crying out the Latin words of a service in some Roman Catholic cathedral. She waited. Her husband spoke. He was repeating something, and she knew it was poetry from the rhythm and the ring of exultation
Starting point is 04:06:26 and melancholy in his voice. Come out and climb the garden. path, Luriana, Lourri Lee. The china rose is all abloom and buzzing with the yellow bee. The words, she was looking at the window, sounded as if they were floating like flowers on water out there, cut off from them all, as if no one had said them, but they had come into existence of themselves. And all the lives we ever lived, and all the lives to be, are full of trees and changing leaves. She did not know what they meant. But, like music, the words seemed to be spoken by her own voice, outside herself,
Starting point is 04:07:08 saying quite easily and naturally what had been in her mind the whole evening, while she said different things. She knew, without looking round, that everyone at the table was listening to the voice, saying, I wonder if it seems to you, Luriana Luralee. With the same sort of relief and pleasure that she had, as if this were, at last, the natural thing to say, this were their own voice speaking. But the voice had stopped. She looked round. She made herself get up.
Starting point is 04:07:43 Augustus Carmichael had risen, and, holding his table napkin so that it looked like a long white robe, he stood chanting. To see the kings go riding by, over Lawn and Daisy Lee, with their palm leaves, and cedar, Luriana, Luralee. And as she passed him, he turned slightly towards her, repeating the last words, Luriana, Luralee, and bowed to her as if he did her homage. Without knowing why, she felt that he liked her better than he had ever done before, and with a feeling of relief and gratitude, she returned his bow, and passed through the door which he held open for her.
Starting point is 04:08:26 It was necessary now to carry everything a step further. With her foot on the threshold, she waited a moment longer, in a scene which was vanishing even as she looked. And then, as she moved and took Minter's arm and left the room, it changed. It shaped itself differently. It had become, she knew, giving one last look at it over her shoulder, already the past. End of Section 8
Starting point is 04:08:56 Section 9 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf This Librevox recording is in the public domain Chapter 18 As usual, Lily thought There was always something that had to be done at that precise moment Something that Mrs. Ramsey had decided for reasons of her own to do instantly It might be with everyone standing about making jokes
Starting point is 04:09:22 as now, not being able to decide whether they were going into the smoking room, into the drawing room, up to the attics. Then one saw Mrs. Ramsey in the midst of this hubbub standing there with Minter's arm in hers, bethink her, yes, it is time for that now, and so make off at once with an air of secrecy to do something alone. And directly she went, a sort of disintegration set in. They waved about, went different ways. Mr. Banks took Charles Tannes. by the arm and went off to finish on the terrace the discussion they had begun at dinner about politics, thus giving a turn to the whole poise of the evening, making the weight fall in a different direction. As if, Lily thought, seeing them go, and hearing a word or two about
Starting point is 04:10:07 the policy of the Labour Party, they had gone up onto the bridge of the ship and were taking their bearings. The change from poetry to politics struck her like that. So Mr. Banks and Charles, Mrs. Ramsey going upstairs in the lamplight alone. Where, Lily wondered, was she going so quickly? Not that she did, in fact, run or hurry. She went indeed rather slowly. She felt rather inclined, just for a moment, to stand still after all that chatter, and pick out one particular thing, the thing that mattered, to detach it,
Starting point is 04:10:44 separate it off, clean it of all the emotions and odds and ends of things, and so hold it before her, and bring it to the tribunal, where, ranged about in conclave, sat the judges she had set up to decide these things. Is it good, is it bad, is it right or wrong, where are we all going to, and so on? So she righted herself after the shock of the event, and quite unconsciously and incongruously, used the branches of the elm-trees outside to help her stabilise her position. Her world was changing, they were still.
Starting point is 04:11:22 The event had given her a sense of movement. All must be in order. She must get that right and that right, she thought, insensibly approving of the dignity of the tree's stillness, and now again of the superb upward rise, like the beak of a ship up a wave, of the elm branches as the wind raised them. For it was windy, she stood a moment to look out.
Starting point is 04:11:48 It was windy. so that the leaves now and then brushed open a star, and the stars themselves seemed to be shaking and darting light, and trying to flash out between the edges of the leaves. Yes, that was done then, accomplished, and as with all things done, became solemn. Now one thought of it, cleared of chatter and emotion, it seemed always to have been, only was shown now, and so, being shown, struck everything in. to stability. They would, she thought, going on again, however long they lived, come back to this night, this moon, this wind, this house, and to her too. It flattered her, where she was most susceptible of flattery, to think how, wound about
Starting point is 04:12:39 in their hearts, however long they lived, she would be woven, and this, and this, she thought, going upstairs laughing, but affectionately at the sofa on the landing, her mothers, at the rocking-chair, her father's, at the map of the Hebrides. All that would be revived again in the lives of Paul and Minter, the Ralees, she tried the new name over, and she felt, with her hand on the nursery door, that community of feeling with other people, which emotion gives, as if the walls of partition had become so thin that, practically, The feeling was one of relief and happiness. It was all one stream.
Starting point is 04:13:21 And chairs, tables, maps, were hers, were theirs. It did not matter whose. And Paul and Minter would carry it on when she was dead. She turned the handle firmly, lest it should squeak, and went in, pursing her lips slightly, as if to remind herself that she must not speak aloud. But directly she came in, she saw, with annoyance, that the precaution was not needed. The children were not asleep. It was most annoying.
Starting point is 04:13:53 Mildred should be more careful. There was James wide awake, and Cam sitting bolt upright, and Mildred out of bed in her bare feet, and it was almost eleven, and they were all talking. What was the matter? It was that horrid skull again. She had told Mildred to move it, but Mildred, of course, had forgotten, and now there was a little. was Cam wide awake and James wide awake, quarrelling when they ought to have been asleep hours ago. What had possessed Edward to send them this horrid skull? She had been so foolish as to let them nail it up there. It was nailed fast, Mildred said, and Cam couldn't go to sleep with it in the room, and James screamed if she touched it. Then Cam must go to sleep. It had great horns, said Cam,
Starting point is 04:14:43 "'Must go to sleep and dream of lovely palaces,' said Mrs. Ramsey, sitting down on the bed by her side. "'She could see the horns,' Cam said, all over the room. "'It was true. "'Wherever they put the light, and James could not sleep without a light, "'there was always a shadow somewhere.' "'But think, Cam, it's only an old pig,' said Mrs. Ramsey. "'A nice black pig like the pigs at the farm.'
Starting point is 04:15:11 But Cam thought it was a horrid thing, branching at her all over the room. "'Well then,' said Mrs. Ramsey, "'we will cover it up.' And they all watched her go to the chest of drawers, and open the little drawers quickly one after another, and not seeing anything that would do, she quickly took her own shawl off and wound it round the skull, round and round and round,
Starting point is 04:15:36 and then she came back to Cam and laid her head almost flat on the pillow beside Cam's, and said how lovely it looked now, how the fairies would love it. It was like a bird's nest. It was like a beautiful mountain such as she had seen abroad, with valleys and flowers and bells ringing and birds singing and little goats and antelopes, and... She could see the words echoing as she spoke them rhythmically in Cam's mind. And Cam was repeating after her how it was like a mountain,
Starting point is 04:16:05 a bird's nest, a garden, and there were little antelopes, and her eyes were opening and shutting, and Mrs. Ramsey went on speaking still more monotonously, and more rhythmically, and more nonsensically, how she must shut her eyes and go to sleep, and dream of mountains and valleys and stars falling and parrots and antelopes and gardens, and everything lovely, she said,
Starting point is 04:16:31 raising her head very slowly, and speaking more and more mechanically, until she sat upright and saw that Cam was asleep. Now, she whispered, crossing over to his bed, James must go to sleep too. For sea, she said, the boar's skull was still there. They had not touched it. They had done just what he wanted. It was there quite unhurt.
Starting point is 04:16:54 He made sure that the skull was still there under the shore. But he wanted to ask her something more. Would they go to the lighthouse tomorrow? No, not tomorrow, she said. But soon, she promised him. the next fine day. He was very good. He lay down. She covered him up. But he would never forget, she knew, and she felt angry with Charles Tansley, with her husband, and with herself, for she had raised his hopes. Then, feeling for her shawl and remembering that she had wrapped it
Starting point is 04:17:30 round the boar's skull, she got up and pulled the window down another inch or two, and heard the wind, and got a breath of the perfectly indifferent chill night air, and murmured good-night to Mildred, and left the room, and let the tongue of the door slowly lengthen in the lock, and went out. She hoped he would not bang his books on the floor above their heads, she thought, still thinking how annoying Charles Tansley was. For neither of them slept well, they were excitable children, and since he said things like that about the lighthouse,
Starting point is 04:18:02 it seemed to her likely that he would knock a pile of books over, just as they were going to sleep, clumsily sweeping them off the table with his elbow. For she supposed that he had gone upstairs to work. Yet he looked so desolate. Yet she would feel relieved when he went. Yet she would see that he was better treated tomorrow. Yet he was admirable with her husband.
Starting point is 04:18:27 Yet his manners certainly wanted improving. Yet she liked his laugh. Thinking this, as she came downstairs, she noticed that she could now see the moon itself through the staircase window, the yellow harvest moon, and turned, and they saw her standing above them on the stairs. "'That's my mother,' thought Prue. "'Yes, Minter should look at her, Paul Rayleigh should look at her. "'That is the thing itself,' she felt, as if there were only one person like that in the world,
Starting point is 04:19:00 her mother. And, from having been quite grown up a moment before, talking with the others, she became a child again, and what they had been doing was a game, and would her mother sanction their game or condemn it, she wondered. And thinking what a chance it was for Minter and Paul and Lily to see her, and feeling what an extraordinary stroke of fortune it was for her to have her, and how she would never grow up and never leave home, she said, like a child. We thought of going down to the beach to watch the waves. Instantly, for no reason at all, Mrs. Ramsey became like a girl of twenty, full of gaiety.
Starting point is 04:19:42 A mood of revelry suddenly took possession of her. Of course they must go, of course they must go, she cried, laughing. And, running down the last three or four steps quickly, she began turning from one to the other, and laughing, and drawing Minter's rap around her, and saying she only wished she could come too, and would they be very late, and had any of them got a watch? Yes, Paul has, said Minter.
Starting point is 04:20:10 Paul slipped a beautiful gold watch out of a little wash-leather case to show her, and as he held it in the palm of his hand before her, he felt, she knows all about it, I need not say anything. He was saying to her as he showed her the watch, I've done it, Mrs. Ramsey, I owe it, Mrs. Ramsey, I owe it all to you. And seeing the gold watch lying in his hand, Mrs. Ramsey felt,
Starting point is 04:20:35 how extraordinarily lucky Minter is. She is marrying a man who has a gold watch and a wash-leather bag. How I wish I could come with you, she cried. But she was withheld by something so strong that she never even thought of asking herself what it was. Of course it was impossible for her to go with them. But she would have liked to go, had it not been for the other thing, and tickled by the absurdity of her thought, how lucky to marry
Starting point is 04:21:04 a man with a wash-leather bag for his watch, she went with a smile on her lips into the other room, where her husband sat reading. Chapter 19. Of course, she said to herself, coming into the room, she had to come here to get something she wanted. First, she wanted to sit down in a particular chair under a particular lamp, but she wanted something more, though she did not know, could not think what it was that she wanted. She looked at her husband, taking up her stocking and beginning to knit, and saw that he did not want to be interrupted, that was clear. He was reading something that moved him very much. He was half smiling, and then she knew he was controlling his emotion. He was tossing the pages over.
Starting point is 04:21:57 He was acting it. Perhaps he was thinking himself the person in the book. She wondered what book it was. Oh, it was one of old Sir Walters, she saw, adjusting the shade of her lamp so that the light fell on her knitting. For Charles Tansley had been saying, she looked up as if she expected to hear the crash of books on the floor above, had been saying that people don't read Scott anymore. Then her husband thought, that's what they'll say of me. So he went and got one of those books. And if he came to the conclusion, that's true, what Charles Tansley said,
Starting point is 04:22:35 he would accept it about Scott. She could see that he was weighing, considering, putting this with that as he read. But not about himself. He was always uneasy about himself. That troubled her. He would always be worrying about his own books, will they be read? Are they good? Why aren't they better? What do people think of me?
Starting point is 04:23:01 Not liking to think of him so, and wondering if they had guessed at dinner why he suddenly became irritable, when they talked about fame and books lasting. Wondering if the children were laughing at that. She twitched the stockings out, and all the fine gravings came drawn with steel instruments about her lips and forehead. And she grew still like a tree which has been tossing and quivering. and now, when the breeze falls, settles, leaf by leaf, into quiet. It didn't matter any of it, she thought. A great man, a great book, fame, who could tell? She knew nothing about it.
Starting point is 04:23:43 But it was his way with him, his truthfulness. For instance, at dinner she had been thinking quite instinctively, if only he would speak. She had complete trust in him. him. And, dismissing all this, as one passes in diving, now a weed, now a straw, now a bubble, she felt again, sinking deeper, as she had felt in the hall when the others were talking. There is something I want, something I have come to get, and she fell deeper and deeper without knowing quite what it was, with her eyes closed. And she waited a little, knitting,
Starting point is 04:24:22 wandering, and slowly rose those words they had said at dinner. The china rose is all the bloom and buzzing with the honey-bee, began washing from side to side of her mind rhythmically, and as they washed, words, like little shaded lights, one red, one blue, one yellow, lit up in the dark of her mind, and seemed leaving their perches up there to fly across and across, or to cry out and to be echoed. So she turned and felt on the table beside her for a book. And all the lives we ever lived, and all the lives to be, a full of trees and changing leaves, she murmured, sticking her needles into the stocking. And she opened the book and began reading here and there at random, and as she did so, she felt that she was climbing backwards, upwards,
Starting point is 04:25:15 shoving her way up under petals that curved over her, so that she only knew this is white or this is red. She did not know at first what the words meant at all. Steer, hither steer your winged pines, all beaten mariners, she read, and turned the page, swinging herself, zigzagging this way and that, from one line to another, as from one branch to another, from one red and white flower to another,
Starting point is 04:25:44 until a little sound roused her, her husband slapping his thighs. Their eyes met for a second, but they did not want to speak to each other. They had nothing to say, but something seemed, nevertheless, to go from him to her. It was the life, it was the power of it, it was the tremendous humour she knew, that made him slap his thighs. Don't interrupt me, he seemed to be saying. don't say anything, just sit there. And he went on reading. His lips twitched.
Starting point is 04:26:21 It filled him. It fortified him. He clean forgot all the little rubs and digs of the evening, and how it bored him unutterably to sit still while people ate and drank interminably, and his being so irritable with his wife, and so touchy and minding when they passed his books over as if they didn't exist at all. But now he felt. it didn't matter a dam who reached Z, if thought ran like an alphabet from A to Z.
Starting point is 04:26:49 Somebody would reach it, if not he, then another. This man's strength and sanity, his feeling for straightforward simple things, these fishermen, the poor old crazed creature in mucklebacket's cottage, made him feel so vigorous, so relieved of something that he felt roused and triumphant and could not choke back his tears. Raising the book a little to hide his face, he let them fall, and shook his head from side to side, and forgot himself completely. But not one or two reflections about morality and French novels and English novels, and Scott's hands being tied, but his own view perhaps being as true as the other view, forgot his own bothers and failures completely in poor Steney's drowning, and muckleback its sorrow.
Starting point is 04:27:38 That was Scott at his best. and the astonishing delight and feeling of vigor that it gave him. Well, let them improve upon that, he thought, as he finished the chapter. He felt that he had been arguing with somebody and had got the better of him. They could not improve upon that, whatever they might say, and his own position became more secure. The lovers were fiddlesticks, he thought, collecting it all in his mind again. That's fiddlesticks, that's first-rate.
Starting point is 04:28:10 he thought, putting one thing beside another. But he must read it again. He could not remember the whole shape of the thing. He had to keep his judgment in suspense. So he returned to the other thought, if young men did not care for this, naturally they did not care for him either. One ought not to complain, thought Mr. Ramsey,
Starting point is 04:28:34 trying to stifle his desire to complain to his wife that young men did not admire him. But he was determined. he would not bother her again. Here he looked at her reading. She looked very peaceful reading. He liked to think that everyone had taken themselves off and that he and she were alone.
Starting point is 04:28:55 The whole of life did not consist in going to bed with a woman, he thought, returning to Scott and Balzac, to the English novel and the French novel. Mrs. Ramsey raised her head, and like a person in a light sleep, seemed to say that if he wanted her to wake she would, she really would, but otherwise might she go on sleeping just a little longer, just a little longer. She was climbing up those branches, this way and that,
Starting point is 04:29:23 laying hands on one flower and then another. Nor praise the deep vermilion in the rose, she read, and so reading she was ascending, she felt, onto the top, onto the summit. How satisfying. How restful! All the odds and ends of the day stuck to this magnet. Her mind felt swept, felt clean. And then, there it was, suddenly entire.
Starting point is 04:29:51 She held it in her hands, beautiful and reasonable, clear and complete. Here, the sonnet. But she was becoming conscious of her husband looking at her. He was smiling at her, quizzically, as if he were ridiculing her gently for being asleep. in broad daylight, but at the same time he was thinking, go on reading. You don't look sad now, he thought. And he wondered what she was reading, and exaggerated her ignorance, her simplicity, for he liked to think that she was not clever, not book learned at all. He wondered if she
Starting point is 04:30:29 understood what she was reading. Probably not, he thought. She was astonishingly beautiful. Her beauty seemed to him, if that were possible, to increase. Yet seemed it winter still and you away, as with your shadow I with these did play, she finished. Well, she said, echoing his smile dreamily, looking up from her book. As with your shadow, I with these did play, she murmured, putting the book on the table. What had happened, she wondered, as she took up her nitty, since she had seen him alone.
Starting point is 04:31:10 She remembered dressing and seeing the moon, Andrew holding his plate too high at dinner, being depressed by something William had said. The birds in the trees, the sofa on the landing, the children being awake, Charles Tansley waking them with his books falling. Oh, no, that she had invented. And Paul having a wash-leather case for his watch.
Starting point is 04:31:34 Which should he tell him about? They're engaged. she said, beginning to knit. Paul and Minter. So I guessed, he said. There was nothing very much to be said about it. Her mind was still going up and down, up and down with the poetry. He was still feeling very vigorous, very forthright,
Starting point is 04:31:56 after reading about Stini's funeral. So they sat silent. Then she became aware that she wanted him to say something. Anything, anything, she thought. going on with her knitting, anything will do. How nice it would be to marry a man with a wash-leather bag for his watch, she said, for that was the sort of joke they had together. He snorted.
Starting point is 04:32:22 He felt about this engagement as he always felt about any engagement. The girl is much too good for that young man. Slowly it came into her head. Why is it then that one wants people to marry? What was the value? the meaning of things. Every word they said now would be true. Do say something, she thought,
Starting point is 04:32:45 wishing only to hear his voice. For the shadow, the thing folding them in was beginning, she felt, to close round her again. Say anything, she begged, looking at him, as if for help. He was silent, swinging the compass on his watch-chain to and fro, and thinking of Scott's novels and Balzac's novels. But through the crepuscular walls of their intimacy, for they were drawing together involuntarily,
Starting point is 04:33:13 coming side by side, quite close. She could feel his mind like a raised hand shadowing her mind, and he was beginning, now that her thoughts took a turn he disliked, towards this pessimism, as he called it, to fidget, though he said nothing, raising his hand to his forehead, twisting a lock of hair, letting it fall again. You won't finish that stocking tonight.
Starting point is 04:33:37 he said, pointing to her stocking. That was what she wanted, the asperity in his voice reproving her. If he says it's wrong to be pessimistic, probably it is wrong, she thought, the marriage will turn out all right. No, she said, flattening the stocking out upon her knee. I shan't finish it. And what then? For she felt that he was still looking at her, but that his look had changed.
Starting point is 04:34:06 He wanted something, wanted the thing she always found it so difficult to give him, wanted her to tell him that she loved him. And that, no, she could not do. He found talking so much easier than she did. He could say things. She never could. So naturally it was always he that said the things, and then for some reason he would mind this suddenly, and would reproach her.
Starting point is 04:34:34 A heartless woman, he called her. she never told him that she loved him. But it was not so, it was not so. It was only that she could never say what she felt. Was there no crumb on his coat? Nothing she could do for him. Getting up, she stood at the window with the reddish-brown stocking in her hands, partly to turn away from him,
Starting point is 04:34:59 partly because she remembered how beautiful it often is, the sea at night. But she knew that he had turned his head as she'd, turned, he was watching her. She knew that he was thinking, you are more beautiful than ever, and she felt herself very beautiful. Will you not tell me just for once that you love me? He was thinking that, for he was roused, what with Minter and his book, and there having quarreled about going to the lighthouse. But she could not do it, she could not say it. Then, knowing that he was watching her, instead of saying anything, she turned, holding her
Starting point is 04:35:39 stocking and looked at him. And as she looked at him, she began to smile, for though she had not said a word, he knew, of course he knew that she loved him. He could not deny it. And smiling, she looked out of the window, and said, thinking to herself, nothing on earth can equal this happiness. Yes, you were right, it's going to be wet tomorrow. You won't be able to go.
Starting point is 04:36:07 And she looked at him smiling, for she had triumphed again. She had not said it, yet he knew. End of Section 9. Section 10 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Part 2. Time passes.
Starting point is 04:36:30 Chapter 1 Well, we must wait for the future to show, said Mr Banks, coming in from the terrace. It's almost too dark to see, said Andrew, coming up from the beach. One can hardly tell which is the sea and which is the land, said Prue. Do we leave that light burning? said Lily, as they took their coats off indoors. No, said Prue, not if everyone's in. "'Andrew,' she called back, "'just put out the light in the hall.'
Starting point is 04:37:04 "'One by one the lamps were all extinguished, "'except that Mr. Carmichael, "'who liked to lie awake a little, reading Virgil, "'kept his candle burning rather longer than the rest. "'Chapter two.' "'So with the lamps all put out, "'the moon sunk, and a thin rain drumming on the roof, "'a downpouring of immense darkness began.
Starting point is 04:37:29 "'Nothing, it seemed, could see, Survived the flood, the profusion of darkness, which, creeping in at keyholes and crevices, stole round window-blinds, came into bedrooms, swallowed up here a jugged basin, there a bowl of red and yellow dahlias, there the sharp edges and firm bulk of a chest of drawers. Not only was furniture confounded, there was scarcely anything left of body or mind, by which one could say, this is he or this is she. Sometimes a hand was raised as if to clutch something or ward something off, or somebody groaned, or somebody laughed aloud, as if sharing a joke with nothingness. Nothing stirred in the drawing-room, or in the dining-room, or on the staircase. Only through the rusty hinges and swollen, sea-moistened woodwork, certain airs, detached from the body of the wind. The house was ramshackle, after all, crept round corners and ventured in.
Starting point is 04:38:28 doors. Almost one might imagine them, as they entered the drawing-room, questioning and wondering, toying with the flap of hanging wallpaper, asking, would it hang much longer, when would it fall? Then, smoothly brushing the walls, they passed on musingly, as if asking the red and yellow roses on the wallpaper whether they would fade, and questioning, gently, for there was time at their disposal, the torn letters in the waste-paper basket, the flowers, the books, all of which were now open to them, and asking, were they allies, were they enemies, how long would they endure? So some random light directing them with its pale footfall upon stair and mat,
Starting point is 04:39:14 from some uncovered star or wandering ship, or the lighthouse even, with its pale footfall upon stair and mat, the little airs mounted the staircase and nosed round bedroom doors. but here surely they must cease. Whatever else may perish and disappear, what lies here is steadfast. Here one might say to those sliding lights, those fumbling airs that breathe and bend over the bed itself, here you can neither touch nor destroy. Upon which, wearily, ghostily, as if they had feather-light fingers and the light persistency of feathers,
Starting point is 04:39:54 they would look once on the shut eyes and the loosely clasping fingers, and fold their garments wearily and disappear. And so, nosing, rubbing, they went to the window on the staircase, to the servants' bedrooms, to the boxes in the attics, descending, blanched the apples on the dining-room table, fumbled the petals of roses, tried the picture on the easel, brushed the mat and blew a little sand along the floor. At length, desisting, all ceased together, gathered together, all sighed together,
Starting point is 04:40:33 altogether gave off an aimless gust of lamentation, to which some door in the kitchen replied, swung wide, admitted nothing, and slammed too. Here, Mr. Carmichael, who was reading Virgil, blew out his candle. It was past midnight. CHAPTER III. But what, after all, is one night? A short space, especially when the darkness dims so soon, and so soon a bird sings, a cock grows, or a faint green quickens,
Starting point is 04:41:08 like a turning leaf in the hollow of the wave. Night, however, succeeds to night. The winter holds a pack of them in store, and deals them equally, evenly with indefatigable fingers. They lengthen, they darken. Some of them hold aloft clear planets, plates of brightness. The autumn trees, ravaged as they are, take on the flash of tattered flags kindling in the gloom of cool cathedral caves,
Starting point is 04:41:39 where gold letters on marble pages describe death in battle, and how bones bleach and burn far away in Indian sands. The autumn trees gleam. in the yellow moonlight, in the light of harvest moons, the light which mellows the energy of labour, and smooths the stubble, and brings the wave lapping blue to the shore. It seemed now as if, touched by human penitence and all its toil, divine goodness had parted the curtain and displayed behind it, single, distinct, the hair erect, the wave falling, the boat rocking, which, did we deserve them, should be ours all.
Starting point is 04:42:19 ways. But alas, divine goodness, twitching the cord, draws the curtain. It does not please him. He covers his treasures in a drench of hail, and so breaks them, so confuses them, that it seems impossible that their calm should ever return, or that we should ever compose from their fragments a perfect whole, or read in the littered pieces the clear words of truth. For our penitence deserves a glimpse only, our toil, respite only. Our toil, respite only. The nights now are full of wind and destruction. The trees plunge and bend, and their leaves fly helter-skelter until the lawn is plastered with them, and they lie packed in gutters and choke drain-pipes and scatter damp paths. Also the sea tosses itself and breaks itself, and should any sleep are fancying that he might find on the beach an answer to his doubts, a sharer of his solitude, throw off his bedclothes and go down by himself to walk on the sand, no image with semblance of serving and divine promptitude comes readily to hand, bringing the night to order and making the world reflect the compass of the soul.
Starting point is 04:43:30 The hand dwindles in his hand, the voice bellows in his ear. Almost it would appear that it is useless in such confusion to ask the night those questions as to what and why and wherefore, which tempt the sleeper from his bed to seek an answer. Mr. Ramsey, stumbling along a passage one dark morning, stretched his arms out. But Mrs. Ramsey, having died rather suddenly the night before, his arms, though stretched out, remained empty. Chapter 4. So with the house empty, and the doors locked, and the mattresses rolled round, those stray airs,
Starting point is 04:44:15 advanced guards of great armies, blustered in, brushed bare boards, nibbled and fanned, met nothing in bedroom or drawing-room that wholly resisted them, but only hangings that flapped, wood that creaked, the bare legs of tables, saucepins and china already furred, tarnished, cracked. What people had shed and left, a pair of shoes, a shooting-cap, some faded skirts and coats in wardrobes, those alone kept the human shape, and in the emptiness indicated how once they were filled, and animated, how once hands were busy with hooks and buttons, how once the looking-glass had
Starting point is 04:44:57 held a face, had held a world hollowed out in which a figure turned, a hand flashed, the door opened, in came children rushing and tumbling, and went out again. Now, day after day, light turned, like a flower reflected in water, its sharp image on the wall opposite. Only the shadow of the trees, flourishing in the wind, made a beisance on the wall, and for a moment darkened the pool in which light reflected itself, or birds, flying, made a soft spot flutter slowly across the bedroom floor. So loveliness reigned, and stillness, and together made the shape of loveliness itself, a form from which life had parted, solitary like a pool at evening, far distant, seen from a train window, vanishing so quickly that the pool, pale in the evening,
Starting point is 04:45:53 is scarcely robbed of its solitude, though once seen. Loveliness and stillness clasped hands in the bedroom, and among the shrouded jugs and sheeted chairs, even the prying of the wind and the soft nose of the clammy sea airs, rubbing, sniffing, iterating and reiterating their questions, will you fade, will you perish? Scarcely disturbed the peace, the indifference, the air of pure integrity, as if the question they asked scarcely needed that they should answer, we remain. Nothing, it seemed, could break that image, corrupt that innocence, or disturb the swaying mantle of silence, which, week after week, in the empty room, wove into itself the falling
Starting point is 04:46:41 cries of birds, ships hooting, the drone and hum of the fields. A dog's bark, a man's shout, and folded them round the house in silence. Once only a board sprang on the landing. Once in the middle of the night with a roar, with a rupture, as after centuries of quiescence, a rock rends itself from the mountain and hurdles crashing into the valley. One fold of the shawl loosened and swung to and fro. Then again peace descended, and the shadow wavered, Light bent to its own image in adoration on the bedroom wall, and Mrs. McNabb, tearing the veil of silence with hands that had stood in the wash-tub, grinding it with boots that had crunched the shingle, came as directed to open all windows and dust the bedrooms.
Starting point is 04:47:35 Chapter 5 As she lurched, for she rolled like a ship at sea, and leered, for her eyes fell on nothing directly, but with a side-long glance that deprecated the sco'clock. gone and anger of the world. She was witless. She knew it. As she clutched the banisters and hauled herself upstairs, and rolled from room to room, she sang. Rubbing the glass of the long-looking glass and leering sideways at her swinging figure, a sound issued from her lips, something that had been gay twenty years before on the stage, perhaps, had been hummed and danced to. But now, coming from the toothless, bonneted, caretaking woman, was robbed of meaning, was like the voice of witlessness, humour, persistency itself, trodden down
Starting point is 04:48:24 but springing up again, so that as she lurched, dusting, wiping, she seemed to say how it was one long sorrow and trouble, how it was getting up and going to bed again, and bringing things out and putting them away again. It was not easy or snug this world she had known for close on seventy years, bowed down she was with weariness. How long, she asked, creaking and groaning on her knees under the bed, dusting the boards. How long shall it endure? But hobbled to her feet again, pulled herself up, and again with her sidelong leer which slipped and turned aside even from her own face and her own sorrows, stood and gaped in the glass, aimlessly smiling, and began Again the old amble and hobble, taking up mats, putting down china, looking sideways in the
Starting point is 04:49:19 glass, as if, after all, she had her consolations, as if indeed there twined about her dirge some incorrigible hope. Visions of joy there must have been at the wash-tub, say with her children, yet two had been base-born and one had deserted her, at the public house, drinking, turning over scraps in her drawers. Some cleavage of the dark there must have been, some channel in the depths of obscurity, through which light enough issued to twist her face grinning in the glass and make her, turning to her job again, mumble out the old music-hall song. The mystic, the visionary, walking the beach on a fine night,
Starting point is 04:50:03 stirring a puddle, looking at a stone, asking themselves, What am I? What is this? Had suddenly an answer vouchsafed them. They could not say what it was, so that they were warm in the frost and had comfort in the desert. But Mrs. McNabb continued to drink and gossip as before. Chapter 6 The spring, without a leaf to toss, bare and bright like a virgin fierce in her chastity, scornful in her purity, was laid out on fields wide-eyed and watchful, and entirely careless of what was done or thought by the beholders.
Starting point is 04:50:45 Prue Ramsey, leaning on her father's arm, was given in marriage. What, people said, could have been more fitting. And they added, how beautiful she looked. As summer neared, as the evenings lengthened, there came to the wakeful, the hopeful, walking the beach, stirring the pool, imaginations of the strangest kind, of flesh turned to atoms which drove before the wind,
Starting point is 04:51:12 of stars flashing in their hearts, of cliff, sea, cloud and sky, brought purposely together to assemble outwardly the scattered parts of the vision within. In those mirrors, the minds of men, in those pools of uneasy water, in which clouds forever turn and shadows form, dreams persisted, and it was impossible to resist the strange intimation which every gull, flower, tree, man and woman, and the white earth itself seemed to declare, but if questioned at once to withdraw, that good triumphs, happiness prevails, order rules, or to resist the extraordinary stimulus to range hither and thither, in search of some absolute good, some crystal of intensity, remote from the known pleasures and familiar
Starting point is 04:52:06 virtues, something alien to the processes of domestic life, single, hard, bright, like a diamond in the sand, which would render the possessor secure. Moreover, softened and acquiescent, the spring with her bees humming and gnats dancing, threw her cloak about her, veiled her eyes, averted her head, and among passing shadows and flights of small rain, seemed to have taken upon her, a knowledge of the sorrows of mankind. Prue Ramsey died that summer, in some illness connected with childbirth, which was indeed a tragedy, people said.
Starting point is 04:52:47 Everything, they said, had promised so well. And now, in the heat of summer, the wind sent its spies about the house again. Flies wove a web in the sunny rooms, weeds that had grown close to the glass in the night, tapped methodically at the windowpane. When darkness fell, the stroke of the lighthouse, which had laid itself with such authority upon the carpet in the darkness, tracing its pattern, came now in the softer light of spring,
Starting point is 04:53:18 mixed with moonlight, gliding gently, as if it laid its caress and lingered stealthily, and looked and came lovingly again. But in the very lull of this loving caress, as the long stroke leant upon the bed, the rock was rent asunder, another fold of the shawl loosened, there it hung and swayed. Through the short summer nights and the long summer days, when the empty rooms seemed to murmur with the echoes of the fields and the hum of flies, the long streamer waved gently, swayed aimlessly, while the sun so striped and barred the rooms and filled them with yellow haze that Mrs. McNabb, when she broke in and lurched about, dusting, sweeping, looked like a tropical fish oaring its way through sun-lanced waters.
Starting point is 04:54:11 But slumber and sleep, though it might, there came later in the summer ominous sounds like the measured blows of hammers dulled on felt, which, with their repeated shocks, still further loosened the shawl and cracked the teacups. Now and again some glass tinkled in the cupboard, as if a giant voice had shrieked so loud in its agony, that tumblers stood inside a cupboard, vibrated too. Then again, silence fell. And then, night after night, and sometimes in plain midday
Starting point is 04:54:43 when the roses were bright and light turned on the wall, its shape clearly there seemed to drop into this silence, this indifference, this integrity, the thud of something falling. A shell exploded. Twenty or thirty young men were blown up in France, among them Andrew Ramsey, whose death, mercifully, was instantaneous. At that season, those who had gone down to pace the beach,
Starting point is 04:55:12 and ask of the sea and sky what message they reported, or what vision they affirmed, had to consider among the usual tokens of divine bounty, the sunset on the sea, the pallor of dawn, the moon rising, fishing boats against the moon, and children making mud pies or pelting each other with handful, of grass. Something out of harmony with this jacundity and this serenity. There was the silent apparition of an ashen-coloured ship, for instance. Come, gone. There was a purplish stain upon
Starting point is 04:55:46 the bland surface of the sea, as if something had boiled and bled invisibly beneath. This intrusion into a scene calculated to stir the most sublime reflections, and lead to the most comfortable conclusions stayed their pacing. It was difficult, blandly to overlook them, to abolish their significance in the landscape, to continue, as one walked by the sea, to marvel how beauty outside mirrored beauty within. Did nature supplement what man advanced? Did she complete what he began? With equal complacence she saw his misery, his meanness, and his torture. That dream of sharing, completing, of finding in solitude on the beach an answer, was then but a reflection in a mirror, and the mirror itself was but the surface glassiness which forms inquiescence when the nobler powers sleep beneath. Impatient, despairing yet loath to go, for beauty offers her lures, has her consolations.
Starting point is 04:56:52 To pace the beach was impossible. contemplation was unendurable. The mirror was broken. Mr. Carmichael brought out a volume of poems that spring, which had an unexpected success. The war, people said, had revived their interest in poetry. End of Section 10. Section 11 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Chapter 7. Night after night. summer and winter, the torment of storms, the arrow-like stillness of fine. Had there been
Starting point is 04:57:34 anyone to listen, from the upper rooms of the empty house, only gigantic chaos streaked with lightning could have been heard tumbling and tossing, as the winds and waves disported themselves, like the amorphous bulks of Leviathans, whose brows are pierced by no light of reason, and mounted one on top of another, and lunged and plunged and plunged in the darkness or the For night and day, month and year, ran shapelessly together, in idiot games, until it seemed as if the universe were battling and tumbling, in brute confusion and wanton lust aimlessly by itself. In spring, the garden urns, casually filled with wind-blown plants, were gay as ever. Violets came and daffodils. But the stillness and the brightness of the day were as strange as the chaos and tumult of night, with the trees standing there, and the flowers standing there, looking before them, looking up,
Starting point is 04:58:35 yet beholding nothing, eyeless and so terrible. Chapter 8 Thinking no harm, for the family would not come, never again some said, and the house would be sold at Micklemus, perhaps. Mrs. McNabb stooped and picked a bunch of flowers. to take home with her. She laid them on the table while she dusted. She was fond of flowers. It was a pity to let them waste. Suppose the house was sold. She stood, arms akimbo, in front of the looking-glass. It would want seeing to. It would. There it had stood all these years without a
Starting point is 04:59:14 soul in it. The books and things were mouldy, for, what with the war and help being hard to get, the house had not been cleaned as she could have wished. It was beyond one person's strength to get it straight now. She was too old. Her legs pained her. All those books needed to be laid out on the grass in the sun. There was plaster fallen in the hall. The rainpipe had blocked over the study window and let the water in.
Starting point is 04:59:42 The carpet was ruined quite. But people should come themselves. They should have sent somebody down to sea. for there were clothes in the cupboards. They had left clothes in all the bedrooms. What was she to do with them? They had the moth in them, Mrs. Ramsey's things. Poor lady, she would never want them again.
Starting point is 05:00:04 She was dead, they said, years ago in London. There was the old grey cloak she wore gardening, Mrs. McNabb fingered it. She could see her, as she came up the drive with the washing, stooping over her flowers. The garden was a pitiful sight now, all run to riot, and rabbits scuttling at you out of the beds. She could see her with one of the children by her in that grey cloak. There were boots and shoes, and a brush and comb left on the dressing-table,
Starting point is 05:00:36 for all the world as if she expected to come back tomorrow. She had died very sudden at the end, they said. And once they had been coming, but had put off coming, what with the war and travel being so difficult. difficult these days. They had never come all these years, just sent her money, but never wrote, never came, and expected to find things as they had left them. Ah, dear. Why, the dressing-table drawers were full of things, she pulled them open, handkerchiefs, bits of ribbon. Yes, she could see Mrs. Ramsey as she came up the drive with the washing. Good evening, Mrs. McNabb, she would say.
Starting point is 05:01:17 She had a pleasant way with her. The girls all liked her. But dear, many things had changed since then. She shut the drawer. Many families had lost their dearest. So she was dead, and Mr. Andrew killed, and Miss Prue dead too, they said, with her first baby. But everyone had lost someone these years. Prices had gone up shamefully and didn't come down again, neither.
Starting point is 05:01:45 She could well remember her in her grey cloak. Good evening Mrs. McNabb, she said, and told Cook to keep a plate of milk soup for her, quite thought she wanted it, carrying that heavy basket all the way up from town. She could see her now stooping over her flowers, and faint and flickering, like a yellow beam or the circle at the end of a telescope,
Starting point is 05:02:10 a lady in a grey cloak, stooping over her flowers, went wandering over the bedroom, room wall, up the dressing-table, across the washstand, as Mrs. McNabbled and ambled, dusting, straightening. And Cook's name now, mildred, Marion, some name like that. Ah, she had forgotten. She did forget things.
Starting point is 05:02:34 Fiery, like all red-haired women. Many a laugh they had had. She was always welcome in the kitchen. She made them laugh, she did. Things were better than now. She sighed. There was too much work for one woman. She wagged her head this side and that.
Starting point is 05:02:53 This had been the nursery. Why, it was all damp in here. The plaster was falling. Whatever did they want to hang a beast's skull there. Gone mouldy too. And rats in all the attics. The rain came in. But they never sent, never came.
Starting point is 05:03:12 Some of the locks had gone, so the doors banged. She didn't like to be up here at dusk alone, neither. It was too much for one woman. Too much, too much. She creaked. She moaned. She banged the door. She turned the key in the lock and left the house alone.
Starting point is 05:03:31 Shut up. Locked. Chapter 9. The house was left. The house was deserted. It was left like a shell on a sandhill to fill with dry salt grains now that life had left it. The long night seemed to have set in, the trifling airs nibbling, the clammy breaths fumbling, seemed to have triumphed. The saucepan had rusted and the mat decayed. Toads had nosed their way in.
Starting point is 05:04:04 Idly, aimlessly, the swaying shawls swung to and fro. A thistle thrust itself between the tiles in the larder. The swallows nested in the drawing-room. The floor was, was strewn with straw. The plaster fell in shovelfuls. Rafters were laid bare. Rats carried off this and that to gnaw behind the wainscots. Tautoshell butterflies burst from the chrysalis and patted their life out on the windowpane. Popies sewed themselves among the dahlias. The lawn waved with long grass. Giant artichokes towered among roses. A fringed carnation flowered among the cabbages, while the gentle tapping of a waltzing of a weed at the window, had become, on winter's nights, a drumming from sturdy trees and thorned
Starting point is 05:04:54 briars, which made the whole room green in summer. What power could now prevent the fertility, the insensibility of nature? Mrs. McNabb's dream of a lady, of a child, of a plate of milk soup? It had wavered over the walls like a spot of sunlight and vanished. She had locked the door. she had gone. It was beyond the strength of one woman, she said. They never sent. They never wrote. There were things up there rotting in the drawers.
Starting point is 05:05:28 It was a shame to leave them so, she said. The place was gone to rack and ruin. Only the lighthouse beam entered the rooms for a moment, sent its sudden stare over bed and wall in the darkness of winter, looked with equanimity at the thistle and the swallow, the rat and the straw. Nothing now withstood them, nothing said no to them.
Starting point is 05:05:52 Let the wind blow, let the poppy seed itself and the carnation mate with the cabbage, let the swallow build in the drawing-room and the thistle thrust aside the tiles and the butterfly sun itself on the faded chintz of the armchairs. Let the broken glass and the china
Starting point is 05:06:09 lie out on the lawn and be tangled over with grass and wild berries. For now had come that, moment, that hesitation when dawn trembles and night pauses, when, if a feather alight in the scale, it will be weighed down. One feather, and the house, sinking, falling, would have turned and pitched downwards to the depths of darkness. In the ruined room, picnickers would have lit their kettles, lovers sought shelter there, lying on the bare boards, and the shepherd stored his dinner on the bricks, and the tramp slept with his coat round him to ward off the cold.
Starting point is 05:06:49 Then the roof would have fallen. Briars and hemlocks would have blotted out path, step and window, would have grown unequally but lustily over the mound, until some trespasser, losing his way, could have told only by a red-hot poker among the nettles, or a scrap of china in the hemlock, that here, once someone had lived, there had been a house. If the feather had fallen, if it had tipped the scale downwards, the whole house would have plunged to the depths to lie upon the sands of oblivion.
Starting point is 05:07:21 But there was a force working, something not highly conscious, something that leered, something that lurched, something not inspired to go about its work with dignified ritual or solemn chanting. Mrs. McNabb groaned. Mrs. Bast creaked. They were old, they were stiff, their legs ate. They came with their brooms and pales at last. They got to work. All of a sudden, would Mrs. McNabb see that the house was ready, one of the young ladies wrote. Would she get this done? Would she get that done? All in a hurry. They might be coming for the summer, had left everything to the last, expected to find things as they had left them. Slowly and painfully, with broom and pale, mopping, scouring, Mrs. Mrs. McNabb, Mrs. Bast, stayed the corruption and the rot, rescued from the pool of time that
Starting point is 05:08:19 was fast closing over them, now a basin, now a cupboard, fetched up from oblivion all the Waverly novels and a tea set one morning, in the afternoon restored to sun and air a brass fender and a set of steel fire-irons. George, Mrs. Baste's son, caught the rats and cut the grass. They had the builders. attended with the creaking of hinges and the screeching of bolts, the slamming and banging of damp swollen woodwork, some rusty, laborious berths seemed to be taking place, as the women, stooping, rising, groaning, singing,
Starting point is 05:08:57 slapped and slammed, upstairs now, now down in the cellars. Oh, they said, the work! They drank their tea in the bedroom sometimes, or in the study, breaking off work at midday with the smudge on their faces, and their old hands clasped and cramped with the broom handles. Flopped on chairs they contemplated, now the magnificent conquest over taps and bath, now the more arduous, more partial triumph over long rows of books, black as ravens once, now white-stained, breeding pale mushrooms and secreting furtive spiders. Once more, as she felt the tea warm in her, the telescope fitted itself to Mrs. McNabb's eyes,
Starting point is 05:09:43 and in a ring of light she saw the old gentleman, lean as a rake, wagging his head, as she came up with the washing. Talking to himself, she supposed, on the lawn. He never noticed her. Some said he was dead, some said she was dead. Which was it? Mrs. Bast didn't know for certain either. The young gentleman was dead.
Starting point is 05:10:07 That, she was sure. She had read his name in the papers. There was the cook now. Mildred, Marion, some such name as that. A red-headed woman, quick-tempered like all her sort, but kind too if you knew the way with her. Many a laugh they had had together. She saved a plate of soup for Maggie,
Starting point is 05:10:28 a bite of ham sometimes, whatever was over. They lived well in those days. They had everything they wanted. Glibly, jovially, with the tea hot in her, she unwound her ball of memories, sitting in the wicker armchair by the nursery fender. There was always plenty doing, people in the house,
Starting point is 05:10:51 twenty staying sometimes, and washing up till long past midnight. Mrs. Bast, she had never known them, had lived in Glasgow at that time, wondered, putting her cup down, whatever they hung that beast's skull, therefore. Shot in foreign parts, no doubt. It might well be, said Mrs. McNabb, wantoning on with her memories. They had friends in eastern countries, gentlemen staying there, ladies in evening dress.
Starting point is 05:11:19 She had seen them once through the dining-room door all sitting at dinner. Twenty, she dared say, all in their jewellery, and she asked to stay help wash up, might be till after midnight. Ah, said Mrs. Bast, they'd find it changed. She leant out of the window. She watched her son George sithing the grass. They might well ask what had been done to it, seeing how old Kennedy was supposed to have charge of it, and then his leg got so bad after he fell from the cart,
Starting point is 05:11:50 and then perhaps no one for a year, or the better part of one, and then Davy MacDonald, and seats might be sent, but who should say if they were ever planted? They'd find it changed. She watched her son, sithing. He was a great one for work, one of those quiet ones. Well, they must be getting along with the cupboards, she supposed. They hauled themselves up.
Starting point is 05:12:17 At last, after days of labour within, of cutting and digging without, dusters were flicked from the windows, the windows were shut too, keys were turned all over the house, the front door was banged, it was finished. And now, as if the cleaning was, and the scrubbing and the sithing and the mowing had drowned it, there rose that half-heard melody, that intermittent music which the ear half catches but lets fall, a bark, a bleat, irregular, intermittent yet somehow related,
Starting point is 05:12:51 the hum of an insect, the tremor of cut grass, dissevered yet somehow belonging, the jar of a door-beetle, the squeak of a wheel, loud, low but mysteriously related, which the ear strains to bring together, and is always on the verge of harmonising, but they are never quite heard, never fully harmonised, and at last, in the evening, one after another the sounds die out, and the harmony falters and silence falls. With the sunset, sharpness was lost, and, like mist rising, quiet rose, quiet sprang, spread. The wind settled. Loosely the world shook itself down to sleep. Darkly here, without
Starting point is 05:13:38 a light to it, save what came greens effused through leaves, or pale on the white flowers in the bed by the window. Lily Briscoe had her bag carried up to the house late one evening in September. Mr. Carmichael came by the same train. Chapter 10. Then, indeed, peace had come. messages of peace breathed from the sea to the shore, never to break its sleep anymore, to lull it rather more deeply to rest, and whatever the dreamers dreamt holily, dreamt wisely, to confirm what else was it murmuring, as Lily Briscoe laid her head on the pillow in the clean, still room and heard the sea. Through the open window, the voice of the beauty of the world came murmuring, too softly to hear
Starting point is 05:14:30 exactly what it said, but what mattered if the meaning were plain, in treating the sleepers? The house was full again, Mrs. Beckwith was staying there, also Mr. Carmichael. If they would not actually come down to the beach itself, at least to lift the blind and look out. They would see then night flowing down in purple, his head crowned, his scepter jewelled, and how in his eyes a child might look. And if they still faltered, Linne. Lily was tired out with travelling and slept almost at once, but Mr. Carmichael read a book by candlelight. If they still said no, that it was vapour, this splendour of his, and that the dew had more power than he, and they preferred sleeping. Gently then, without complaint or argument,
Starting point is 05:15:19 the voice would sing its song. Gently the waves would break. Lily heard them in her sleep. tenderly the light fell. It seemed to come through her eyelids. And it all looked, Mr. Carmichael thought, shutting his book, falling asleep, much as it used to look. Indeed, the voice might resume, as the curtains of dark wrapped themselves over the house, over Mrs. Beckwith, Mr. Carmichael and Lily Briscoe, so that they lay with several folds of blackness on their eyes. Why not accept this? Be content with this. acquiesce and resign. The sigh of all the seas breaking and measure round the aisles soothed them. The night wrapped them.
Starting point is 05:16:05 Nothing broke their sleep, until, the birds beginning and the dawn weaving their thin voices into its whiteness, a cart grinding, a dog somewhere barking, the sun lifted the curtains, broke the veil on their eyes, and Lily Briscoe, stirring in her sleep. She clutched at her blankets as a faula clutches at the turf on the edge of a cliff. Her eyes opened wide. Here she was again, she thought, sitting bolt upright in bed. Awake. End of Section 11.
Starting point is 05:16:42 Section 12 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Part 3. The Lighthouse. Chapter 1. What does it mean then? What can it all mean? Lily Briscoe asked herself, wondering whether, since she had been left alone, it behoved her to go to the kitchen to fetch another cup of coffee or wait here. What does it mean? A catchword that was, caught up from some book, fitting her thought loosely,
Starting point is 05:17:15 for she could not, this first morning with the Ramses, contract her feelings, could only make a phrase resound to cover the blankness of her mind until these vapours had shrunk. for really what did she feel come back after all these years and mrs ramsie dared nothing nothing nothing that she could express at all she had come late last night when it was all mysterious dark now she was awake at her old place at the breakfast table but alone it was very early too not yet eight there was this expedition they were going to the last lighthouse, Mr. Ramsey, Cam and James. They should have gone already. They had to catch the tide or something. And Cam was not ready, and James was not ready, and Nancy had forgotten to order the sandwiches, and Mr. Ramsey had lost his temper and banged out of the room. What's the use of going now? He had stormed. Nancy had vanished. There he was, marching up and down the terrace in a rage.
Starting point is 05:18:23 one seemed to hear doors slamming and voices calling all over the house. Now Nancy burst in and asked, looking round the room, in a queer, half-dazed, half-desperate way, what does one send to the lighthouse? As if she were forcing herself to do what she despaired of ever being able to do. What does one send to the lighthouse indeed? At any other time, Lily could have suggested reasonably tea, tobacco, newspaper, But this morning everything seemed so extraordinarily queer that a question like Nancy's, What does one send to the lighthouse?
Starting point is 05:19:02 Opened doors in one's mind that went banging and swinging to and fro, and made one keep asking, in a stupefied gape, What does one send? What does one do? Why is one sitting here after all? Sitting alone, for Nancy went out again, among the clean cups at the long table, she felt cut off from other people and able only to go on watching, asking, wondering. The house, the place, the morning, all seemed strangers to her.
Starting point is 05:19:37 She had no attachment here, she felt, no relations with it, anything might happen, and whatever did happen, a step outside, a voice calling. It's not in the cupboard, it's on the landing, someone cried. was a question, as if the link that usually bound things together had been cut, and they floated up here, down there, off anyhow. How aimless it was, how chaotic, how unreal it was, she thought, looking at her empty coffee cup. Mrs. Ramsey dared. Andrew killed, Prude dead, repeated as she might, it roused no feeling in her.
Starting point is 05:20:20 And we all get together in a how much. like this on a morning like this, she said, looking out of the window. It was a beautiful still day. Chapter 2. Suddenly Mr. Ramsey raised his head as he passed and looked straight at her, with his distraught wild gaze which was yet so penetrating, as if he saw you, for one second, for the first time, forever. And she pretended to drink out of her empty coffee cup, so as to escape him, to escape his demand on her, to put aside a moment longer that imperious need. And he shook his head at her, and strode on. Alone, she heard him say.
Starting point is 05:21:06 Perished, she heard him say. And like everything else this strange morning, the words became symbols, wrote themselves all over the grey-green walls. If only she could put them together, she felt, write them out in some sentence, then she would have got at the truth of things. Old Mr. Carmichael came padding softly in, fetched his coffee, took his cup and made off to sit in the sun. The extraordinary unreality was frightening, but it was also exciting.
Starting point is 05:21:40 Going to the lighthouse. But what does one send to the lighthouse? Perished, alone. The grey-green light on the wall opposite. The empty places. Such were some of the parts, but how bring them together, she asked. As if any interruption would break the frail shape she was building on the table, she turned her back to the window, lest Mr. Ramsey should see her.
Starting point is 05:22:07 She must escape somewhere, be alone somewhere. Suddenly she remembered. When she had sat there last ten years ago, there had been a little sprig or leaf pattern on the tablecloth, which she had looked at in a moment of revelation. There had been a problem about a foreground of a picture. Move the tree to the middle, she had said. She had never finished that picture.
Starting point is 05:22:33 She would paint that picture now. It had been knocking about in her mind all these years. Where were her paints? she wondered. Her paints, yes. She had left them in the hall last night. She would start at once. She got up quickly before Mr. Ramsey turned. She fetched herself a chair.
Starting point is 05:22:55 She pitched her easel with her precise, old-madeish movements on the edge of the lawn, not too close to Mr. Carmichle, but close enough for his protection. Yes, it must have been precisely here that she had stood ten years ago. There was the wall, the hedge, the tree. The question was of some relation between those masses. She had borne it in her mind all these years. It seemed as if the solution had come to her. She knew now what she wanted to do.
Starting point is 05:23:27 But with Mr. Ramsey bearing down on her, she could do nothing. Every time he approached, he was walking up and down the terrace, ruin approached, chaos approached. She could not paint. She stooped. She turned. She took up this rag. She squeezed that tube.
Starting point is 05:23:47 but all she did was to ward him off for a moment. He made it impossible for her to do anything. For if she gave him the least chance, if he saw her disengaged a moment, looking his way a moment, he would be on her, saying, as he had said last night, you find as much changed.
Starting point is 05:24:08 Last night he had got up and stopped before her and said that. Dumb and staring, though they had all sat, the six children whom they used to call after the kings and queens of England, the red, the fair, the wicked, the ruthless. She felt how they raged under it. Kind old Mrs. Beckwith said something sensible. But it was a house full of unrelated passions. She had felt that all the evening.
Starting point is 05:24:36 And on top of this chaos, Mr. Ramsey got up, pressed her hand and said, You will find us much changed. and none of them had moved or had spoken, but had sat there as if they were forced to let him say it. Only James, certainly the sullen, scowled at the lamp, and Cam screwed her handkerchief round her finger. Then he reminded them that they were going to the lighthouse tomorrow. They must be ready, in the hall, on the stroke of half-past seven.
Starting point is 05:25:09 Then, with his hand on the door he stopped, he turned upon them, Did they not want to go, he demanded. Had they dared say no, he had some reason for wanting it, he would have flung himself tragically backwards into the bitter waters of despair. Such a gift he had for gesture. He looked like a king in exile. Doggedly, James said yes. Cam stumbled more wretchedly.
Starting point is 05:25:38 Yes, oh yes, they'd both be ready, they said. And it struck her, this. was tragedy. Not Paul's, dust and the shroud, but children coerced, their spirits subdued. James was sixteen, Cam, seventeen, perhaps. She had looked round for someone who was not there, for Mrs. Ramsey, presumably. But there was only kind Mrs. Begworth, turning over her sketches under the lamp. Then, being tired, her mind still rising and falling with the sea, The taste and smell that places have after long absence possessing her, the candles wavering in her eyes, she had lost herself and gone under.
Starting point is 05:26:24 It was a wonderful night, starlet. The waves sounded as they went upstairs. The moon surprised them, enormous, pale, as they passed the staircase window. She had slept at once. She set her clean canvas firmly upon the easel, as a barrier, frail, but she hoped sufficiently substantial to ward off Mr. Ramsey and his exactingness. She did her best to look, when his back was turned, at her picture. That line there, that mass there. But it was out of the question. Let him be fifty feet away. Let him not even speak to
Starting point is 05:27:05 you. Let him not even see you. He permeated. He prevailed. He imposed himself. He changed. He changed. He everything. She could not see the color. She could not see the lines. Even with his back turned to her, she could only think, but he'll be down on me in a moment, demanding, something she felt she could not give him. She rejected one brush. She chose another. When would those children come? When would they all be off? She fidgeted. That man, she thought, her anger rising in her, never gave, that man took. She, on the other hand, would be forced to give. Mrs. Ramsey had given. Giving, giving, giving, giving she had died, and had left all this. Really, she was angry with Mrs. Ramsey. With the brush slightly trembling in her fingers, she looked at the hedge, the step,
Starting point is 05:28:07 the wall. It was all Mrs. Ramsey's doing. She was dead. Here was Lily at 44, wasting her time, unable to do a thing, standing there, playing at painting, playing at the one thing one did not play at, and it was all Mrs. Ramsey's fault. She was dead. The step where she used to sit was empty. She was dead. But why repeat this over and over again? Why be always trying to bring up some feeling she had not got? There was a kind of blasphemy in it. It was all dry, all withered, all spent. They ought not to have asked her. She ought not to have come. One can't waste one's time at 44, she thought. She hated playing at painting. A brush, the one dependable thing in a world of strife, ruin, chaos,
Starting point is 05:29:05 that one should not play with, knowingly even. She detested it. But he made her. "'You shan't touch your canvas,' he seemed to say, "'bearing down on her, till you've given me what I want of you.' "'Here he was, close upon her again, greedy, distraught. "'Well,' thought Lily in despair, "'letting her right hand fall at her side,
Starting point is 05:29:32 "'it would be simpler then to have it over. "'Surely she could imitate from recollection the glow, "'the rhapsody, the self-surrender "'she had seen on so many, women's faces, on Mrs. Ramsey's, for instance, when on some occasion like this they blazed up, she could remember the look on Mrs. Ramsey's face, into a rapture of sympathy, of delight in the reward they had, which, though the reason of it escaped her, evidently conferred on them the most supreme bliss of which human nature was capable. Here he was, stopped by her side.
Starting point is 05:30:09 She would give him what she could. Chapter 3 She seemed to have shriveled slightly, he thought. She looked a little skimpy, wispy, but not unattractive. He liked her. There had been some talk of her marrying William Banks once, but nothing had come of it. His wife had been fond of her. He had been a little out of temper too at breakfast, and then,
Starting point is 05:30:41 And then, this was one of those moments when an enormous need urged him, without being conscious what it was, to approach any woman, to force them, he did not care how. His need was so great to give him what he wanted. Sympathy. Was anybody looking after her, he said. Had she everything she wanted? Oh, thanks, everything, said Lily Briscoe nervously. No, she could not do it.
Starting point is 05:31:14 She ought to have floated off instantly upon some wave of sympathetic expansion. The pressure on her was tremendous. But she remained stuck. There was an awful pause. They both looked at the sea. Why, thought Mr. Ramsey, should she look at the sea when I am here? She hoped it would be calm enough for them to land at the lighthouse. she said.
Starting point is 05:31:41 The lighthouse, the lighthouse, what's that got to do with it? He thought impatiently. Instantly, with the force of some primeval gust, for really he could not restrain himself any longer. There issued from him such a groan that any other woman in the whole world would have done something, said something. All except myself, thought Lily,
Starting point is 05:32:06 girding at herself bitterly, who am not a woman. but a peevish, ill-tempered, dried-up old maid, presumably. Mr. Ramsey sighed to the full. He waited. Was she not going to say anything? Did she not see what he wanted from her? Then he said he had a particular reason for wanting to go to the lighthouse.
Starting point is 05:32:30 His wife used to send the men things. There was a poor boy with a tuberculous hip, the lightkeeper's son. He sighed profoundly. He sighed significantly. All Lily wished was that this enormous flood of grief, this insatiable hunger for sympathy, this demand that she should surrender herself up to him entirely, and even so he had sorrows enough to keep her supplied forever,
Starting point is 05:32:57 should leave her, should be diverted. She kept looking at the house, hoping for an interruption, before it swept her down in its flow. "'Such expeditions,' said Mr. Ramsey, "'scraping the ground with his toe, a very painful. "'Still, Lily said nothing. "'She is a stock, she is a stone,' he said to himself. "'They are very exhausting,' he said,
Starting point is 05:33:26 "'looking, with a sickly look that nauseated her. "'He was acting, she felt. "'This great man was dramatizing himself. "'At his beautiful hands.' It was horrible. It was indecent. Would they never come, she asked, for she could not sustain this enormous weight of sorrow, support these heavy draperies of grief. He had assumed a pose of extreme decrepitude. He even tottered a little as he stood there, a moment longer.
Starting point is 05:33:59 Still, she could say nothing. The whole horizon seemed swept bare of objects to talk about, could only feel, amazingly, as Mr. Ramsey stood there, how his gaze seemed to fall dolefully over the sunny grass and discolour it, and cast over the rubicund, drowsy, entirely contented figure of Mr. Carmichael, reading a French novel on a deck-chair, a veil of creep, as if such an existence, flaunting its prosperity in a world of woe, were enough to provoke the most dismal thoughts of all. Look at him, he seemed to be saying, look at me. And indeed, all the time he was feeling, think of me, think of me.
Starting point is 05:34:44 Ah, could that bulk only be wafted alongside of them, Lily wished. Had she only pitched her easel a yard or two closer to him, a man, any man would staunch this effusion, would stop these lamentations. A woman, she had brought her. provoked this horror. A woman she should have known how to deal with it. It was immensely to her discredit, sexually, to stand there dumb. One said, what did one say? Oh, Mr. Ramsey, dear Mr. Ramsey. That was what that kind old lady who sketched Mrs. Beckwith would have said, instantly and rightly. But no. They stood there, isolated from the rest of the world.
Starting point is 05:35:32 His immense self-pity, his demand for sympathy poured and spread itself in pools at her feet, and all she did, miserable sinner that she was, was to draw her skirts a little closer round her ankles, lest she should get wet. In complete silence she stood there, grasping her paintbrush. Heaven could never be sufficiently praised. She heard sounds in the house. James and Cam must be coming. But Mr. Ramsey, as if he knew that his time ran short, exerted upon her solitary figure the immense pressure of his concentrated woe, his age, his frailty, his desolation, when suddenly, tossing his head impatiently in his annoyance, for after all what woman could resist him, he noticed that his bootlaces were untied.
Starting point is 05:36:28 remarkable boots they were too, Lily thought, looking down at them, sculptured, colossal, like everything that Mr. Ramsey wore, from his frayed tie to his half-buttoned waistcoat, his own indisputably. She could see them walking to his room of their own accord, expressive in his absence of pathos, surliness, ill-temper, charm. What beautiful boots! she exclaimed. She was ashamed of herself. To praise his boots when he asked her to solace his soul,
Starting point is 05:37:04 when he had shown her his bleeding hands, his lacerated heart, and asked her to pity them. Then to say, cheerfully, Ah, but what beautiful boots you wear! Deserved, she knew, and she looked up expecting to get it in one of his sudden roars of ill-temper, complete annihilation.
Starting point is 05:37:25 Instead, Mr. Ramsey smiled. His paw, his draperies, his infirmities fell from him. Ah, yes, he said, holding his foot up for her to look at. They were first-rate boots. There was only one man in England who could make boots like that. Boots are among the chief curses of mankind, he said. Bootmakers make it their business, he exclaimed, to cripple and torture the human foot.
Starting point is 05:37:56 They are also the most obstinate. and perverse of mankind. It had taken him the best part of his youth to get boots made as they should be made. He would have her observe. He lifted his right foot and then his left, that she had never seen boots made quite that shape before. They were made of the finest leather in the world also. Most leather was mere brown paper and cardboard.
Starting point is 05:38:23 He looked complacently at his foot, still held in the air. They had reached, she felt, a sunny island where peace twelt, sanity reigned, and the sun forever shone, the blessed island of good boots. Her heart warmed to him. Now let me see if you can tie a knot, he said. He poo-pooed her feeble system. He showed her his own invention. Once you tied it, it never came undone.
Starting point is 05:38:54 Three times he knotted her shoe, three times he unnotted. it. Why, at this completely inappropriate moment, when he was stooping over her shoe, should she be so tormented with sympathy for him that, as she stooped too, the blood rushed to her face, and, thinking of her callousness, she had called him a play actor, she felt her eyes swell and tingle with tears. Thus occupied, he seemed to her a figure of infinite pathos. He tied knots. He bought boots. There was no helping Mr. Ramsey on the journey he was going.
Starting point is 05:39:36 But now, just as she wished to say something, could have said something perhaps. Here they were, Cam and James. They appeared on the terrace. They came lagging, side by side, a serious, melancholy couple. But why was it like that that they came? She could not help feeling annoyed with them. They might have come more cheerfully. They might have given him what?
Starting point is 05:40:03 Now that they were off, she would not have the chance of giving him. For she felt a sudden emptiness, a frustration. Her feeling had come too late. There it was ready, but he no longer needed it. He had become a very distinguished, elderly man, who had no need of her whatsoever. She felt a snubbed. He slung a knapsack round his shoulders. He shed out the parcels.
Starting point is 05:40:31 There were a number of them, ill-tied in brown paper. He sent Cam for a cloak. He had all the appearance of a leader making ready for an expedition. Then, wheeling about, he led the way with his firm military tread in those wonderful boots, carrying brown paper parcels, down the path, his children following him. They looked, she thought, as if fate had devoted them to some stern enterprise, and they went to it, still young enough to be drawn acquiescent in their father's wake, obediently, but with a pallor in their eyes, which made her feel that they suffered something beyond
Starting point is 05:41:13 their years in silence. So they passed to the edge of the lawn, and it seemed to Lily that she watched a procession go by, drawn on by some stress of common feeling. which made it, faltering and flagging as it was, a little company bound together and strangely impressive to her. Politely, but very distantly, Mr. Ramsey raised his hand and saluted her as they passed. But what a face, she thought, immediately finding the sympathy which she had not been asked to give, troubling her for expression. What had made it like that? Thinking, after night, she supposed. About the reality of kitchen tables, she added, remembering the
Starting point is 05:42:01 symbol which in her vagueness as to what Mr. Ramsey did think about, Andrew had given her. He had been killed by the splinter of a shell instantly, she bethought her. The kitchen table was something visionary, austere, something bare, hard, not ornamental. There was no colour to it. It was all edges and angles. It was uncons. It was unconsor. compromisingly plain. But Mr. Ramsey kept always his eyes fixed upon it, never allowed himself to be distracted or deluded, until his face became worn too, and ascetic, and partook of this unornamented beauty which so deeply impressed her. Then, she recalled, standing where he had left her, holding her brush, worries had fretted it, not so nobly. He must have had his doubts about
Starting point is 05:42:54 that table, she supposed, whether the table was a real table, whether it was worth the time he gave to it, whether he was able, after all, to find it. He had had doubts, she felt, or he would have asked less of people. That was what they talked about late as night sometimes, she suspected, and then next day Mrs. Ramsey looked tired, and Lily flew into a rage with him over some absurd little thing. But now he had nobody to talk to about that table, or his boots, or his knots, and he was like a lion seeking whom he could devour, and his face had that touch of desperation, of exaggeration in it which alarmed her, and made her pull her skirts about her.
Starting point is 05:43:41 And then, she recalled, there was that sudden revivification, that sudden flare, when she praised his boots, that sudden recovery. of vitality and interest in ordinary human things, which too passed and changed, for he was always changing and hid nothing. Into that other final phase which was new to her, and had, she owned, made herself ashamed of her own irritability, when it seemed as if he had shared worries and ambitions and the hope of sympathy and the desire for praise, had entered some other region, was drawn on, as if by curiosity, in dumb colloquy, whether with himself or another, at the head of that little
Starting point is 05:44:26 procession out of one's range. An extraordinary face. The gate banged. End of Section 12. Section 13 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Chapter 4 So they're gone, she thought, sighing with a while. relief and disappointment. Her sympathy seemed to be cast back on her, like a bramble sprung across her face. She felt curiously divided, as if one part of her were drawn out there. It was a still day, hazy. The lighthouse looked this morning at an immense distance. The other had fixed itself doggedly, solidly here on the lawn. She saw her canvas as if it had floated up and placed
Starting point is 05:45:20 itself, white and uncompromising, directly before her. It seemed to rebuke her with its cold stare for all this hurry and agitation, this folly and waste of emotion. It drastically recalled her, and spread through her mind, first apiece, as her disorderly sensations. He had gone, and she had been so sorry for him, and she had said nothing, trooped off the field, and then emptiness. She looked blankly at the canvas, with its uncompromising white stare, from the canvas to the garden. There was something, she stood screwing up her little Chinese eyes in her small puckered face. Something she remembered in the relations of those lines cutting across, slicing down, and in the mass of the hedge with its green cave of blues and browns,
Starting point is 05:46:16 which had stayed in her mind, which had tied not in her mind, so that at odds and ends of time, involuntarily as she walked along the Brompton Road, as she brushed her hair. She found herself painting that picture, passing her eye over it, and untying the knot in imagination. But there was all the difference in the world between this planning airily away from the canvas, and actually taking her brush and making the first mark. She had taken the wrong brush in her agitation at Mr. Ramsey's presence, and her easel, rammed into the earth so nervously, was at the wrong angle. And now that she had put that right, and in so doing had subdued the impertinences and
Starting point is 05:47:02 irrelevances that plucked her attention, and made her remember how she was such and such a person, had such and such relations to people, she took her hand and raised her brush. For a moment it stayed trembling, in a painful but exciting ecstasy in the air, Where to begin? That was the question at what point to make the first mark. One line placed on the canvas committed her to innumerable risks, to frequent and irrevocable decisions. All that in idea seemed simple, became in practice immediately complex, as the waves shape themselves symmetrically from the cliff-top, but to the swimmer among them are divided by steep gulfs and foaming crests.
Starting point is 05:47:51 Still, the risk must be run, the mark made. With a curious physical sensation, as if she were urged forward, and at the same time must hold herself back, she made her first quick, decisive stroke. The brush descended. It flickered brown over the white canvas. It left a running mark. A second time she did it. A third time.
Starting point is 05:48:20 And so pausing, and so flickering, she attained a dancing, rhythmical movement, as if the pauses were one part of the rhythm, and the strokes another, and all were related. And so, lightly and swiftly pausing, striking, she scored her canvas with brown running nervous lines, which had no sooner settled there than they enclosed. She felt it looming out at her, a space.
Starting point is 05:48:47 Down in the hollow of one wave, she saw the next wave towering higher and higher above her, for what could be more formidable than that space. Here she was again, she thought, stepping back to look at it, drawn out of gossip, out of living, out of community with people, into the presence of this formidable ancient enemy of hers, this other thing, this truth, this reality, which suddenly laid hands on her, emerged stark at the back of appearances and commanded her attention. She was half unwilling, half reluctant.
Starting point is 05:49:29 Why always be drawn out and hailed away? Why not left in peace to talk to Mr. Carmichael on the lawn? It was an exacting form of intercourse, anyhow. Other worshipful objects were content with worship. men, women, God, all let one kneel prostrate. But this form, were it only the shape of a white lampshade looming on a wicker table, roused one to perpetual combat, challenged one to a fight in which one was bound to be worsted. Always, it was in her nature, or in her sex, she did not know which. Before she exchanged the fluidity of life for the concentration of painting,
Starting point is 05:50:14 she had a few moments of nakedness, where she seemed like an unborn soul, a soul reft of body, hesitating on some windy pinnacle, and exposed without protection to all the blasts of doubt. Why then did she do it? She looked at the canvas, lightly scored with running lines. It would be hung in the servant's bedrooms. It would be rolled up and stuffed under a sofa. What was the good of doing? it then, and she heard some voice saying she couldn't paint, saying she couldn't create,
Starting point is 05:50:51 as if she were caught up in one of those habitual currents, in which, after a certain time, experience forms in the mind, so that one repeats words without being aware any longer of who originally spoke them. Can't paint, can't write, she murmured monotonously, anxiously considering what her plan of attack should be. For the mass loomed before her, it protruded, she felt it pressing on her eyeballs. Then, as if some juice necessary for the lubrication of her faculties were spontaneously squirted, she began precariously dipping among the blues and umbers, moving her brush hither and thither, but it was now heavier and went slower, as if it had fallen in with some rhythm which was
Starting point is 05:51:39 dictated to her. She kept looking at the hedge, at the canvas, by what sheer rhythm was strong enough to bear her along with it on its current. Certainly she was losing consciousness of outer things. And as she lost consciousness of outer things, and her name and her personality and her appearance, and whether Mr. Carmichael was there or not, her mind kept throwing up from its steps, scenes and names and sayings and memories and ideas, like a fountain spurting over that glaring, hideously difficult white space, while she muddled it with greens and blues. Charles Tansley used to say that, she remembered, women can't paint, can't write. Coming up behind her, he had stood close beside her, a thing she hated, as she painted here
Starting point is 05:52:33 on this very spot. Shag tobacco, he said, fivepence an ounce, parading his poverty, his principles. But the war had drawn the sting of her femininity. Poor devils, one thought, poor devils of both sexes. He was always carrying a book about under his arm, a purple book. He worked. He sat, she remembered, working in a blaze of sun. At dinner he would sit right in the middle of the view.
Starting point is 05:53:07 But, after all, she reflected, there was the scene on the beach. One must remember that. It was a windy morning. They had all gone down to the beach. Mrs. Ramsey sat down and wrote letters by a rock. She wrote and wrote. Oh, she said, looking up at something floating in the sea. Is it a lobster pot?
Starting point is 05:53:31 Is it an upturned boat? She was so short-sighted that she could not see, and then Charles Tansley became as nice as he could possibly be. He began playing ducks and drakes. They chose little flat black stones and sent them skipping over the waves. Every now and then Mrs. Ramsey looked up over her spectacles and laughed at them. What they said she could not remember, but only she and Charles throwing stones, and getting on very well all of a sudden, and Mrs. Ramsey watching them. them. She was highly conscious of that. Mrs. Ramsey, she thought, stepping back and screwing up her
Starting point is 05:54:11 eyes. It must have altered the design a good deal when she was sitting on the step with James. There must have been a shadow. When she thought of herself and Charles throwing ducks and drakes and of the whole scene on the beach, it seemed to depend somehow upon Mrs. Ramsey sitting under the rock, with a pad on her knee, writing letters. She wrote innumerable letters, and sometimes the wind took them, and she and Charles just saved a page from the sea. But what power was in the human soul, she thought. That woman sitting there writing under the rock resolved everything into simplicity, made these angers, irritations fall off like old rags.
Starting point is 05:54:57 She brought together this and that, and then this, and so made out of that miserable silliness, and spite. She and Charles squabbling, sparring, had been silly and spiteful. Something, this scene on the beach, for example, this moment of friendship and liking, which survived, after all these years complete, so that she dipped into it to refashion her memory of him, and there it stayed in the mind, affecting one almost like a work of art. Like a work of art, she repeated, looking from her can't. to the drawing-room steps and back again. She must rest for a moment.
Starting point is 05:55:39 And, resting, looking from one to the other vaguely, the old question which traversed the sky of the soul perpetually, the vast, the general question, which was apt to particularise itself at such moments as these, when she released faculties that had been on the strain, stood over her, paused over her, darkened over her. What is the meaning of life?
Starting point is 05:56:06 That was all, a simple question, one that tended to close in on one with years. The great revelation had never come. The great revelation perhaps never did come. Instead, there were little daily miracles, illuminations, matches struck unexpectedly in the dark. Here was one. This, that and the other. herself and Charles Tansley and the breaking wave. Mrs. Ramsey bringing them together.
Starting point is 05:56:38 Mrs. Ramsey saying, life stands still here. Mrs. Ramsey making of the moment something permanent. As in another sphere, Lily herself tried to make of the moment something permanent. This was of the nature of a revelation. In the midst of chaos there was shape, this eternal passing and flowing. She looked at the clouds going and the leaves shaking, was struck into stability. Life stands still here, Mrs. Ramsey said. Mrs. Ramsey, Mrs. Ramsey, she repeated.
Starting point is 05:57:15 She owed it all to her. All was silence. Nobody seemed yet to be stirring in the house. She looked at it there, sleeping in the early sunlight, with its windows green and blue with the reflected leaves. The faint thought she was thinking of Mrs. Ramsey seemed in consonance with this quiet house, this smoke, this fine early morning air. Faint and unreal, it was amazingly pure and exciting. She hoped nobody would open the window or come out of the house, but that she might be left alone to go on thinking, to go on painting. She turned to her canvas. But,
Starting point is 05:57:59 impelled by some curiosity, driven by the discomfort of the sympathy which she held undischarged, she walked a pace or two to the end of the lawn, to see weather. Down there on the beach, she could see that little company setting sail. Down there among the little boats which floated, some with their sails furled, some slowly, for it was very calm, moving away. There was one rather apart from the others. The sail was, even now, being hoisted. She decided that there, in that very distant and entirely silent little boat, Mr. Ramsey was sitting with Cam and James. Now they had got the sail up.
Starting point is 05:58:41 Now, after a little flagging and silence, she watched the boat take its way with deliberation past the other boats out to sea. Chapter 5 The sails flapped over their heads. The water chuckled and slapped the sides of the boat, which drowsed motionless in the sun. Now and then the sails rippled with a little breeze in them, but the ripple ran over them and ceased.
Starting point is 05:59:11 The boat made no motion at all. Mr. Ramsey sat in the middle of the boat. He would be impatient in a moment, James thawed, and Cam thought, looking at her father, who sat in the middle of the boat between them. James steered, Cam sat alone in the bow, with his legs tightly curled. He hated hanging about.
Starting point is 05:59:36 Sure enough, after fidgeting a second or two, he said something sharp to McAllister's boy, who got out his oars and began to row. But their father, they knew, would never be content until they were flying along. He would keep looking for a breeze, fidgeting, saying things under his breath, which McAllister and McAllister's boy would overhear,
Starting point is 05:59:59 and they would both be made horribly uncomfortable. He had made them come. He had forced them to come. In their anger, they hoped that the breeze would never rise, that he might be thwarted in every possible way, since he had forced them to come against their wills. All the way down to the beach they had lagged behind together, though he bade them, walk up, walk up, without speaking.
Starting point is 06:00:28 Their heads were bent in. down. Their heads were pressed down by some remorseless gale. Speak to him they could not. They must come, they must follow. They must walk behind him carrying brown paper parcels. But they vowed, in silence as they walked, to stand by each other and carry out the great compact to resist tyranny to the death. So there they would sit, one at one end of the boat, one at the other, in silence. They would say nothing, only look at him now and then, where he sat with his legs twisted, frowning and fidgeting, and pishing and shoring and muttering things to himself, and waiting impatiently for a breeze. And they hoped it would be calm. They hoped he would
Starting point is 06:01:18 be thwarted. They hoped the whole expedition would fail, and they would have to put back, with their parcels, to the beach. But now, When McAllister's boy had rode a little way out, the sails slowly swung round. The boat quickened itself, flattened itself, and shot off. Instantly, as if some great strain had been relieved, Mr. Ramsey uncurled his legs, took out his tobacco pouch, handed it with a little grunt to McAllister, and felt they knew, for all they suffered, perfectly content.
Starting point is 06:01:56 Now they would sail on for hours like this, and Mr. Ramsey would ask old Macalister a question, about the great storm last winter probably, and old Macalester would answer it, and they would puff their pipes together, and McAllister would take a tarry rope in his fingers, tying or untying some knot, and the boy would fish and never say a word to anyone. James would be forced to keep his eye all the time on the sail, for if he forgot, then the sail puckered and shivered, and the boat slackened, and Mr. Ramsey would say sharply,
Starting point is 06:02:32 Look out, look out! And old McAllister would turn slowly on his seat. So they heard Mr. Ramsey asking some question about the great storm at Christmas. She comes driving round the point, old McAllister said, describing the great storm last Christmas, when ten ships had been driven into the bay for shelter, and he had seen, one there, one there, one there, one. there?"
Starting point is 06:02:59 He pointed slowly round the bay. Mr. Ramsey followed him, turning his head. He had seen four men clinging to the mast. Then she was gone. And at last we shoved her off, he went on. But in their anger and their silence they only caught a word here and there, sitting at opposite ends of the boat, united by their compact to fight tyranny to the death. At last they had shoved her off, they had launched the lifeboat, and they had got her out past
Starting point is 06:03:31 the point. McAllister told the story, and though they only caught a word here and there, they were conscious all the time of their father, how he leant forward, how he brought his voice into tune with McAllister's voice. How, puffing at his pipe, and looking there and there where McAllister pointed, he relished the thought of the storm, and the dark night, and the fisherman. and striving there. He liked that men should labour and sweat on the windy beach at night, pitting muscle and brain against the waves and the wind. He liked men to work like that,
Starting point is 06:04:08 and women to keep house, and sit beside sleeping children indoors, while men were drowned, out there in a storm. So James could tell, so Cam could tell. They looked at him, they looked at each other, from his toss and his vigilance and the ring in his voice, and the little tinge of Scottish accent which came into his voice, making him seem like a peasant himself, as he questioned McAllister about the eleven ships that had been driven into the bay in a storm. Three had sunk. He looked proudly where Macalister pointed, and Cam thought, feeling proud of him, without knowing quite why. Had he been there, he would have launched the lifeboat. He would have reached the wreck,
Starting point is 06:04:56 Cam thought. He was so brave, he was so adventurous, Cam thought. But she remembered, there was the compact to resist tyranny to the death. Their grievance weighed them down. They had been forced. They had been bitten. He had borne them down once more with his gloom and his authority, making them do his bidding on this fine morning, come, because he wished it, carrying these parcels to the lighthouse. Take part in these rites he went through for his own pleasure in memory of dead people, which they hated, so that they lagged after him. All the pleasure of the day was spoiled. Yes, the breeze was freshening. The boat was leaning. the water was sliced sharply and fell away in green cascades, in bubbles, in cataracts.
Starting point is 06:05:51 Cam looked down into the foam, into the sea with all its treasure in it, and its speed hypnotised her, and the tie between her and James sagged a little. It slackened a little. She began to think, how fast it goes. Where are we going? And the movement hypnotised her, while James, with his eye fixed on the sail and on the horizon, steered grimly, but he began to think as he steered that he might escape, he might be quit of it all. They might land somewhere and be free then. Both of them, looking at each other for a moment,
Starting point is 06:06:32 had a sense of escape and exultation, what with the speed and the change. But the breeze bred in Mr. Ramsey too the same excitement, And, as old Macalister turned to fling his line overboard, he cried out aloud. We perished. And then again, each alone. And then, with his usual spasm of repentance or shyness, pulled himself up and waved his hand towards the shore.
Starting point is 06:07:01 See the little house, he said pointing, wishing Cam to look. She raised herself reluctantly and looked. But which was it? She could no longer make out, there on the hillside, which was their house. All looked distant and peaceful and strange. The shore seemed refined, far away, unreal. Already the little distance they had sailed had put them far from it, and given it the changed look, the composed look, of something receding in which one has no longer any part,
Starting point is 06:07:38 which was their house. She could not see it. But I beneath a rougher sea, Mr. Ramsey murmured. He had found the house, and so seeing it, he had also seen himself there. He had seen himself walking on the terrace alone. He was walking up and down between the urns, and he seemed to himself very old and bowed. Sitting in the boat, he bowed, he crouched himself, acting instantly his part, the part of a desolate man, widowed, bereft,
Starting point is 06:08:14 and so called up before him in hosts people sympathising with him, staged for himself as he sat in the boat, a little drama, which required of him to crepitude and exhaustion and sorrow. He raised his hands and looked at the thinness of them to confirm his dream, and then there was given him in abundance women's sympathy, and he imagined how they would soothe him and sympathise with him, him, and so getting in his dream some reflection of the exquisite pleasure women's sympathy was to him.
Starting point is 06:08:47 He sighed, and said gently and mournfully. But I, beneath the rougher sea, was wellmed in deeper gulfs than he, so that the mournful words were heard quite clearly by them all. Cam half started on her seat. It shocked her. It outraged her. The movement roused her father, and he shuddered. and broke off, exclaiming,
Starting point is 06:09:12 Look, look! So urgently that James also turned his head to look over his shoulder at the island. They all looked. They looked at the island. But Cam could see nothing. She was thinking how all those paths and the lawn, thick and knotted with the lives they had lived there,
Starting point is 06:09:32 were gone, were rubbed out, were past, were unreal, and now this was real, the boat and the sail with its patch, McAllister with his earrings, the noise of the waves, all this was real. Thinking this, she was murmuring to herself, we perished, each alone,
Starting point is 06:09:54 for her father's words broke and broke again in her mind, when her father, seeing her gazing so vaguely, began to tease her. Didn't she know the points of the compass, he asked, didn't she know the north from the sound, Did she really think they lived right out there? And he pointed again, and showed her where their house was, there by those trees. He wished she would try to be more accurate.
Starting point is 06:10:21 He said, tell me, which is east, which is west, he said, half laughing at her, half scolding her, for he could not understand the state of mind of anyone, not absolutely imbecile, who did not know the points of the compass. Yet she did not know. And seeing her gazing, with her vague, now rather frightened eyes, fixed where no house was, Mr. Ramsey forgot his dream, how he walked up and down between the urns on the terrace, how the arms were stretched out to him. He thought, women are always like that.
Starting point is 06:10:58 The vagueness of their minds is hopeless. It was a thing he had never been able to understand, but so it was. It had been so with her, his wife. They could not keep anything clearly fixed in their minds. But he had been wrong to be angry with her. Moreover, did he not rather like this vagueness in women? It was part of their extraordinary charm. I will make her smile at me, he thought.
Starting point is 06:11:27 She looks frightened. She was so silent. He clutched his fingers and determined that his voice and his face and all the quick expressive gestures which had been at his command, making people pity him and praise him all these years, should subdue themselves. He would make her smile at him. He would find some simple, easy thing to say to her. But what?
Starting point is 06:11:54 Four, wrapped up in his work as he was, he forgot the sort of thing one said. There was a puppy. They had a puppy. Who was looking after the puppy today? he asked. Yes, thought James pitilessly, seeing his sister's head against the sail. Now she will give way.
Starting point is 06:12:15 I shall be left to fight the tyrant alone. The compact would be left to him to carry out. Cam would never resist tyranny to the death, he thought grimly, watching her face, sad, sulky, yielding. And, as sometimes happens when a cloud falls on a green hillside, and gravity descends, and there among all the surrounding hills is gloom and sorrow, and it seems as if the hills themselves must ponder the fate of the clouded, the darkened, either in pity, or maliciously rejoicing in her dismay.
Starting point is 06:12:51 So Cam now felt herself overcast, as she sat there among calm, resolute people, and wondered how to answer her father about the puppy, how to resist his entreaty, forgive me, care for me, While James, the lawgiver, with the tablets of eternal wisdom, laid open on his knee, his hand on the tiller had become symbolical to her, said, resist him, fight him. He said so rightly, justly, for they must fight tyranny to the death, she thought. Of all human qualities she reverenced justice most. Her brother was most godlike, her father most suppliant.
Starting point is 06:13:35 And to which did she yield, she thought, sitting between them, gazing at the shore whose points were all unknown to her, and thinking how the lawn and the terrace and the house were smoothed away now, and peace dwelt there. Jasper, she said sullenly, he'd look after the puppy. And what was she going to call him? Her father persisted. He had had a dog when he was a little boy, called Frisk. She'll give way, James thought.
Starting point is 06:14:05 as he watched a look come upon her face, a look he remembered. They look down, he thought, at their knitting or something. Then suddenly they look up. There was a flash of blue, he remembered, and then somebody sitting with him laughed, surrendered, and he was very angry. It must have been his mother, he thought, sitting on a low chair, with his father standing over her. He began to search among the infinite series of impressions
Starting point is 06:14:35 which time had laid down, leaf upon leaf, fold upon fold softly, incessantly upon his brain, among sense, sounds, voices harsh, hollow, sweet, and lights passing, and brooms tapping, and the wash and hush of the sea, how a man had marched up and down and stopped dead, upright, over them. Meanwhile, he noticed, Cam dabbled her fingers in the water, and said, and he said, stared at the shore and said nothing. No, she won't give way, he thought. She's different, he thought.
Starting point is 06:15:13 Well, if Cam would not answer him, he would not bother her, Mr. Ramsey decided, feeling in his pocket for a book. But she would answer him. She wished passionately to move some obstacle that lay upon her tongue, and to say, oh yes, frisk, I'll call him frisk. She wanted even to say, was that the dog that found its way over the moor alone. But try as she might, she could think of nothing to say like that,
Starting point is 06:15:43 fierce and loyal to the compact, yet passing on to her father, unsuspected by James, a private token of the love she felt for him. Four, she thought, dabbling her hand, and now Macalester's boy had caught a mackerel, and it lay kicking on the floor with blood on its gills. For she thought, Looking at James, who kept his eyes dispassionately on the sail,
Starting point is 06:16:08 or glanced now and then for a second at the horizon, you're not exposed to it, to this pressure and division of feeling, this extraordinary temptation. Her father was feeling in his pockets. In another second he would have found his book. For no one attracted her more, his hands were beautiful, and his feet, and his voice, and his words,
Starting point is 06:16:32 and his haste and his temper, and his oddity and his passion, and his saying straight out before everyone, we perish each alone, and his remoteness. He had opened his book. But what remained intolerable, she thought, sitting upright and watching McAllister's boy tug the hook out of the gills of another fish, was that crass blindness and tyranny of his, which had poisoned her childhood and raised bitter stuff.
Starting point is 06:17:02 storms, so that even now she woke in the night trembling with rage and remembered some command of his, some insolence, do this, do that, his dominance, his submit to me. So she said nothing, but looked doggedly and sadly at the shore, wrapped in its mantle of peace, as if the people there had fallen asleep, she thought, were free like smoke, were free to come and go like ghosts. They have no suffering there, she thought. End of Section 13. Section 14 of
Starting point is 06:17:41 To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. Chapter 6. Yes, that is their boat, Lily Briscoe decided, standing on the edge of the lawn. It was the boat with greyish-brown sails, which she saw now flatten itself upon the water, and shoot off across the bay. There he sits, she thought, and the children are quite silent still. And she could not reach him either.
Starting point is 06:18:14 The sympathy she had not given him weighed her down. It made it difficult for her to paint. She had always found him difficult. She had never been able to praise him to his face, she remembered, and that reduced their relationship to something neutral, without that element of sex in it which made his manner to Minter so gallant, almost gay. He would pick a flower for her, Lender his books. But could he believe that Minter read them?
Starting point is 06:18:44 She dragged them about the garden, sticking in leaves to mark the place. Do you remember, Mr Carmichael? She was inclined to ask, looking at the old man. But he had pulled his hat half over his forehead. He was asleep or he was dreaming. or he was lying there catching words, she supposed. Do you remember? She felt inclined to ask him as she passed him,
Starting point is 06:19:09 thinking again of Mrs. Ramsey on the beach, the cask bobbing up and down, and the pages flying. Why, after all these years had that survived, ringed round, lit up, visible to the last detail, with all before it blank, and all after it blank,
Starting point is 06:19:28 for miles and miles. "'Is it a boat? Is it a cork?' she would say, "'Lilly repeated, turning back, reluctantly again, to her canvas. "'Heaven be praised for it. The problem of space remained,' she thought, "'taking up her brush again. It glared at her. "'The whole mass of the picture was poised upon that weight. "'Beautiful and bright it should be on the surface, "'feathery and evanescent, one colour melting into another,
Starting point is 06:20:00 like the colours on a butterfly's wing, but beneath the fabric must be clamped together with bolts of iron. It was to be a thing you could ruffle with your breath, and a thing you could not dislodge with a team of horses. And she began to lay on a red, a grey, and she began to model her way into the hollow there. At the same time, she seemed to be sitting beside Mrs. Ramsey on the beach. Is it a boat? Is it a cask?
Starting point is 06:20:29 Mrs. Ramsey said, and she began hunting round for her spectacles. And she sat, having found them, silent, looking out to sea. And Lily, painting steadily, felt as if a door had opened, and one went in and stood gazing silently about in a high cathedral-like place, very dark, very solemn. Shouts came from a world far away. steamers vanished in stalks of smoke on the horizon. Charles threw stones and sent them skipping.
Starting point is 06:21:05 Mrs. Ramsey sat silent. She was glad, Lily thought, to rest in silence, uncommunicative, to rest in the extreme obscurity of human relationships. Who knows what we are, what we feel? Who knows, even at the moment of intimacy, this is knowledge. "'Aren't things spoiled, then?' Mrs. Ramsey may have asked. "'It seemed to have happened so often this silence by her side, "'by saying them. Aren't we more expressive thus?'
Starting point is 06:21:40 "'The moment at least seemed extraordinarily fertile. "'She rammed a little hole in the sand and covered it up, "'by way of burying in it the perfection of the moment. "'It was like a drop of silver, "'in which one dipped and illumined the darkness, of the past. Lily stepped back to get her canvas, so into perspective. It was an odd road to be walking, this of painting.
Starting point is 06:22:08 Out and out one went, further, until at last one seemed to be on a narrow plank, perfectly alone over the sea. And, as she dipped into the blue paint, she dipped too into the past there. Now Mrs. Ramsey got up, she remembered. It was time to go back to the house, time for luncheon. And they all walked up from the beach together, she walking behind with William Banks, and there was Minter in front of them with a hole in her stocking.
Starting point is 06:22:40 How that little round hole of pink heels seemed to flaunt itself before them. How William Banks deplored it, without, so far as she could remember, saying anything about it. It meant to him the annihilation of womanhood, and dirt and disorder, and servants leaving and beds not made at midday, all the things he most abhorred. He had a way of shuddering and spreading his fingers out, as if to cover an unsightly object, which he did now, holding his hand in front of him. And Minter walked on ahead, and presumably Paul met her, and she went off with Paul in the garden. The Ralees, thought Lily Briscoe,
Starting point is 06:23:23 squeezing her tube of green paint. She collected her impressions of the Ralees. Their lives appeared to her in a series of scenes, one on the staircase at dawn. Paul had come in and gone to bed early. Minter was late. There was Minter, wreathed, tinted, garish on the stairs about three o'clock in the morning.
Starting point is 06:23:46 Paul came out in his pyjamas carrying a poker in case of burglars. Minta was eating a sandwich. standing halfway up by a window, in the cadaverous early morning light, and the carpet had a hole in it. But what did they say, Lily asked herself, as if by looking she could hear them? Minter went on eating her sandwich, annoyingly, while he spoke something violent, abusing her, in a mutter so as not to wake the children, the two little boys. He was withered, drawn, she flamboyant, care. for things had worked loose after the first year or so, the marriage had turned out rather badly.
Starting point is 06:24:30 And this, Lily thought, taking the green paint on her brush, this making up scenes about them is what we call knowing people, thinking of them, being fond of them. Not a word of it was true. She had made it up, but it was what she knew them by all the same. She went on tunneling her way into her picture. into the past. Another time, Paul said he, played chess in coffee-houses. She had built up a whole structure of imagination on that saying, too. She remembered how, as he said it, she thought how he rang up the servant, and she said, Mrs. Ralee's out, sir, and he decided that he would not come home
Starting point is 06:25:16 either. She saw him sitting in the corner of some lugubrious place where the smoke attached itself to the red plush seats, and the waitresses got to know you, and he played chess with a little man who was in the tea-trade and lived at Surbiton, but that was all Paul knew about him. And then Minter was out when he came home, and then there was that scene on the stairs, when he got the poker in case of burglars, no doubt to frighten her, too, and spoke so bitterly. saying she had ruined his life. At any rate, when she went down to see them at a cottage near Rickmansworth, things were horribly strained.
Starting point is 06:25:56 Paul took her down the garden to look at the Belgian hares which she bred, and Minter followed them, singing, and put her bare arm on his shoulder, lest he should tell her anything. Minter was bored by hairs, Lily thought. But Minter never gave herself away. She never said things like that about playing chair-sinkering. coffee shops. She was far too conscious, far too wary. But to go on with their story, they had got through the dangerous stage by now. She had been staying with them last summer sometime, and the
Starting point is 06:26:30 car broke down, and Minter had to hand him his tools. He sat on the road mending the car, and it was the way she gave him the tools, business-like, straightforward, friendly, that proved it was all right now. They were in love no longer. No, he had taken up with another woman, a serious woman, with her hair in a plat and a case in her hand. Minta had described her gratefully, almost admiringly, who went to meetings and shared Paul's views, they had got more and more pronounced, about the taxation of land values and a capital levy. Far from breaking up the marriage, that alliance had righted it. They were excellent friends, obviously,
Starting point is 06:27:16 as he sat on the road and she handed him his tools. So that was the story of the Ralees, Lily thought. She imagined herself telling it to Mrs. Ramsey, who would be full of curiosity to know what had become of the Ralees. She would feel a little triumphant, telling Mrs. Ramsey that the marriage had not been a success. But the dead, thought Lily, encountering some obstacle in her design which made her pause and ponder, stepping back a foot or so.
Starting point is 06:27:47 Oh, the dead, she murmured. One pitied them. One brushed them aside. One had even a little contempt for them. They are at our mercy. Mrs. Ramsey has faded and gone, she thought. We can override her wishes, improve away her limited, old-fashioned ideas. She recedes further.
Starting point is 06:28:10 and further from us. Mockingly, she seemed to see her there at the end of the corridor of years, saying, of all incongruous things, marry, marry, sitting very upright early in the morning, with the birds beginning to cheap in the garden outside. And one would have to say to her, it has all gone against your wishes. They're happy like that, I'm happy like this.
Starting point is 06:28:36 Life has changed completely. At that, all her being, even her beauty, became for a moment, dusty and out of date. For a moment Lily standing there, with the sun hot on her back, summing up the Raleys, triumphed over Mrs. Ramsey, who would never know how Paul went to coffee-houses and had a mistress, how he sat on the ground and Minter handed him his tools, how she stood here painting, had never married, not even William Banks. Mrs. Ramsey had planned it. Perhaps, had she lived, she would have compelled it.
Starting point is 06:29:16 Already that summer he was the kindest of men. He was the first scientist of his age, my husband says. He was also, Poor William, it makes me so unhappy when I go to see him to find nothing nice in his house, no one to arrange the flowers. So they were sent for walks together, and she was told, with that faint touch of irony, that made Mrs. Ramsey slip through one's fingers,
Starting point is 06:29:44 that she had a scientific mind. She liked flowers. She was so exact. What was this mania of hers for marriage? Lily wondered, stepping to and fro from her easel. Suddenly, as suddenly as a star slides in the sky, a reddish light seemed to burn in her mind, covering Paul Raleigh, issuing from him. It rose like a fire sent up in token of some celebration by savages on a distant beach. She heard the roar and the crackle. The whole sea for miles round ran red and gold. Some whiny smell mixed with it and intoxicated her,
Starting point is 06:30:25 for she felt again her own headlong desire to throw herself off the cliff and be drowned looking for a pearl brooch on a beach. And the roar and the crackle repelled her with fear and disgust, as if while she saw its splendour and power, she saw too how it fed on the treasure of the house, greedily, disgustingly, and she loathed it. But for a sight, for a glory, it surpassed everything in her experience, and burnt year after year like a signal fire on a desert island at the edge of the sea, and one had only to say, in love, and And instantly, as happened now, uprose Paul's fire again. And it sank, and she said to herself laughing, the Ralees, how Paul went to coffee-houses and played chess. She had only escaped by the skin of her teeth, though, she thought.
Starting point is 06:31:21 She had been looking at the tablecloth, and it had flashed upon her that she would move the tree to the middle, and need never marry anybody, and she had felt an enormous exultation. She had felt, now she could stand up to Mrs. Ramsey, a tribute to the astonishing power that Mrs. Ramsey had over one. Do this, she said, and one did it. Even her shadow at the window with James was full of authority. She remembered how William Banks had been shocked by her neglect of the significance of mother and son.
Starting point is 06:31:56 Did she not admire their beauty, he said. But William, she remembered, had listened to her. to her with his wise child's eyes, when she explained how it was not irreverence, how a light there needed a shadow there, and so on. She did not intend to disparage a subject, which, they agreed, Raphael had treated divinely. She was not cynical. Quite the contrary. Thanks to his scientific mind he understood, a proof of disinterested intelligence
Starting point is 06:32:28 which had pleased her and comforted her enormously. One could talk of painting then seriously to a man. Indeed, his friendship had been one of the pleasures of her life. She loved William Banks. They went to Hampton Court, and he always left her, like the perfect gentleman he was, plenty of time to wash her hands while he strolled by the river. That was typical of their relationship.
Starting point is 06:32:55 Many things were left unsaid. Then they strolled through the courtyards and admired summer, after summer, the proportions and the flowers, and he would tell her things about perspective, about architecture, as they walked, and he would stop to look at a tree, or the view over the lake, and admire a child. It was his great grief. He had no daughter. In the vague, aloof way that was natural to a man who spent so much time in laboratories, that the world, when he came out, seemed to dazzle him, so that he walked slowly, lifted his hand to screen his eyes, and paused, with his head thrown back, merely to breathe the air.
Starting point is 06:33:39 Then he would tell her how his housekeeper was on her holiday. He must buy a new carpet for the staircase. Perhaps she would go with him to buy a new carpet for the staircase. And once something led him to talk about the Ramses, and he had said how when he first saw her she had been wearing a grey hat. she was not more than 19 or 20. She was astonishingly beautiful. There he stood, looking down the avenue at Hampton Court,
Starting point is 06:34:07 as if he could see her there among the fountains. She looked now at the drawing-room step. She saw, through William's eyes, the shape of a woman, peaceful and silent with downcast eyes. She sat musing, pondering. She was in grey that day, Lily thought. Her eyes were bent. She would never lift them.
Starting point is 06:34:32 Yes, thought Lily, looking intently. I must have seen her look like that, but not in grey, nor so still, nor so young, nor so peaceful. The figure came readily enough. She was astonishingly beautiful, as William said. But beauty was not everything. Beauty had this penalty. It came too readily, came too completely.
Starting point is 06:34:57 It stilled life, froze it. One forgot the little agitations, the flush, the pallor, some queer distortion, some light or shadow, which made the face unrecognisable for a moment, and yet added a quality one saw for ever after. It was simpler to smooth that all out under the cover of beauty. But what was the look she had, Lily wondered, when she clapped her dear Stalker's hat on her head, or ran to the same. across the grass, or scolded Kennedy the gardener. Who could tell her? Who could help her? Against her will she had come to the surface, and found herself half out of the picture,
Starting point is 06:35:40 looking, little dazedly, as if at unreal things, at Mr. Carmichael. He lay on his chair with his hands clasped above his paunch, not reading or sleeping, but basking like a creature gorged with existence. His book had fallen onto the table. the grass. She wanted to go straight up to him and say, Mr. Carmichael. Then he would look up benevolently, as always, from his smoky, vague, green eyes. But one only woke people if one knew what one wanted to say to them. And she wanted to say not one thing, but everything. Little words that broke up the thought and dismembered it said nothing. About life, about death, about Mrs. Ravis
Starting point is 06:36:27 No, she thought, one could say nothing to nobody. The urgency of the moment always missed its mark. Words fluttered sideways and struck the object inches too low. Then one gave it up, then the idea sunk back again. Then one became like most middle-aged people, cautious, furtive, with wrinkles between the eyes and a look of perpetual apprehension. For how could one express in words these emotions of the body Express that emptiness there?
Starting point is 06:37:02 She was looking at the drawing-room steps. They looked extraordinarily empty. It was one's body feeling, not one's mind. The physical sensations that went with the bare look of the steps had become suddenly extremely unpleasant. To want and not to have sent all up her body a hardness, a hollowness, a strain. And then to want and not to have, to want and want,
Starting point is 06:37:31 how that wrung the heart, and wrung it again and again. Oh, Mrs. Ramsey, she called out silently, to that essence which sat by the boat, that abstract one made of her, that woman in grey, as if to abuse her for having gone, and then having gone, come back again. It had seemed so safe thinking of her.
Starting point is 06:37:53 Ghost, air, nothingness, a thing you could play with easily and safely at any time of day or night. She had been that, and then suddenly she put her hand out and wrung the heart thus. Suddenly the empty drawing-room steps, the frill of the chair inside, the puppy tumbling on the terrace, the whole wave and whisper of the garden, became like curves and arabesques flourishing round a centre of complete emptiness. "'What does it mean? How do you explain it all?' she wanted to say, turning to Mr. Carmichael again. For the whole world seemed to have dissolved in this early morning hour into a pool of thought, a deep basin of reality, and one could almost fancy that had Mr. Carmichael spoken, for instance, a little tear would have rent the surface pool. And then, something would emerge.
Starting point is 06:38:50 a hand would be shoved up, a blade would be flashed. It was nonsense, of course. A curious notion came to her that he did, after all, hear the things she could not say. He was an inscrutable old man, with the yellow stain on his beard, and his poetry and his puzzles, sailing serenely through a world which satisfied all his wants, so that she thought he only had to put down his hand where he lay on the lawn to fish up anything he wanted. She looked at her picture.
Starting point is 06:39:24 That would have been his answer, presumably, how you and I and she pass and vanish. Nothing stays, all changes, but not words, not paint. Yet it would be hung in the attics, she thought. It would be rolled up and flung under a sofa. Yet even so, even of a picture like that, it was true. One might say, even of this scrawl, not of that actual picture, perhaps,
Starting point is 06:39:56 but of what it attempted, that it remained forever, she was going to say, or, for the words spoken sounded even to herself too boastful, to hint wordlessly. When, looking at the picture, she was surprised to find that she could not see it. Her eyes were full of a hot liquid. She did not think of tears at first, which, without disturbing the firmness of her lips, made the air thick, rolled down her cheeks. She had perfect control of herself, oh yes, in every other way. Was she crying, then, for Mrs. Ramsey, without being aware of any unhappiness? She addressed old Mr. Carmichael again. What was it, then? What did it mean? Could things thrust their hands up and grip one, could the blade cut, the fist grasp? Was there no safety, no learning by heart of
Starting point is 06:40:56 the ways of the world? No guide, no shelter, but all was miracle and leaping from the pinnacle of a tower into the air. Could it be, even for elderly people, that this was life, startling, unexpected, unknown. For one moment she felt that if they both got up, here, now, on the lawn, and demanded an explanation, why was it so short, why was it so inexplicable?
Starting point is 06:41:26 Said it with violence, as two fully equipped human beings from which nothing should be hid might speak. Then beauty would roll itself up, the space would fill, those empty flourishes would form into shape. If they shouted loud enough, Mrs. Ramsey would return. Mrs. Ramsey, she said aloud.
Starting point is 06:41:48 Mrs. Ramsey! The tears ran down her face. Chapter 7. McAllister's boy took one of the fish and cut a square out of its side to bait his hook with. The mutilated body, it was alive still, was thrown back into the sea. End of Section 14. Section 15 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf.
Starting point is 06:42:21 This Libravox recording is in the public domain. Chapter 8 Mrs. Ramsey, Lily cried. Mrs. Ramsey! But nothing happened. The pain increased. That anguish could reduce one to such a pitch of imbecility, she thought. Anyhow, the old man had not heard her.
Starting point is 06:42:46 He remained benigny. If one chose to think it, sublime. Heaven be praised, no one had heard her cry that ignominious cry. Stop pain, stop! She had not obviously taken leave of her senses. No one had seen her step off her strip of board into the waters of annihilation. She remained a skimpy old maid, holding a paintbrush. And now, slowly, the pain of the wall.
Starting point is 06:43:16 the pain of the want and the bitter anger, to be called back, just as she thought she would never feel sorrow for Mrs. Ramsey again, had she missed her among the coffee-cups at breakfast, not in the least, lessened, and of their anguish left, as an antidote, a relief that was balm in itself, and also, but more mysteriously, a sense of someone there, of Mrs. Ramsey, relieved for a moment of the weight that the world had put on her, staying lightly by her side, and then, for this was Mrs. Ramsey in all her beauty, raising to her forehead a wreath of white flowers with which she went.
Starting point is 06:44:00 Lily squeezed her tubes again. She attacked that problem of the hedge. It was strange how clearly she saw her, stepping with her usual quickness across fields, among whose folds, purplish and soft, among whose flowers, hyacinths or lilies, she vanished. It was some trick of the painter's eye. For days after she had heard of her death, she had seen her thus, putting her wreath to her forehead and going unquestioningly with her companion, a shade across the fields.
Starting point is 06:44:35 The sight, the phrase, had its power to console. Wherever she happened to be, painting, here, in the country or in London, the vision would come to her, and her eyes, half-closing, sought something to base her vision on. She looked down the railway carriage, the omnibus, took a line from shoulder or cheek, looked at the windows opposite, at Piccadilly lamp-strung in the evening. All had been part of the fields of death. But always something, it might be a face, a voice, a paperboy crying, Standard, news, thrust through, snubbed her, waked her, required and got in the end
Starting point is 06:45:24 and effort of attention, so that the vision must be perpetually remade. Now again, moved as she was by some instinctive need of distance and blue, she looked at the bay beneath her, making hillocks of the blue bars of the blue bars of the blue. the waves and stony fields of the purple spaces. Again she was roused as usual by something incongruous. There was a brown spot in the middle of the bay. It was a boat. Yes, she realised that after a second. But whose boat? Mr. Ramsey's boat, she replied. Mr. Ramsey, the man who had marched past her, with his hand raised, aloof at the head of a procession, in his beautiful boots, asking her for sympathy, which she had refused. The boat was now halfway across the bay. So fine was the morning,
Starting point is 06:46:22 except for a streak of wind here and there, that the sea and sky looked all one fabric, as if sails were stuck high up in the sky, or the clouds had dropped down into the sea. A steamer far out at sea Had drawn in the air a great scroll of smoke Which stayed there curving and circling decoratively As if the air were a fine gauze which held things And kept them softly in its mesh Only gently swaying them this way and that
Starting point is 06:46:52 And, as happens sometimes when the weather is very fine The cliffs looked as if they were conscious of the ships and the ships looked as if they were conscious of the cliffs, as if they signalled to each other some message of their own. For sometimes quite close to the shore, the lighthouse looked this morning in the haze an enormous distance away. Where are they now? Lily thought, looking out to sea. Where was he, that very old man who had gone past her silently,
Starting point is 06:47:25 holding a brown paper parcel under his arm? The boat was in the middle of the boat. Bay. Chapter 9 They don't feel a thing there, Cam thought, looking at the shore, which, rising and falling, became steadily more distant and more peaceful. Her hand cut a trail in the sea, as her mind made the green swirls and streaks into patterns, and, numbed and shrouded, wandered in imagination in that underworld of waters, where the pearls stuck in clusters to white. sprays. A change came over one's entire mind, and one's body shone half transparent, enveloped in a
Starting point is 06:48:10 green cloak. Then the eddy slackened round her hand. The rush of the water ceased. The world became full of little creaking and squeaking sounds. One heard the waves breaking and flapping against the side of the boat, as if they were anchored in harbour. Everything became very close to one. sail, upon which James had his eyes fixed, until it had become to him like a person whom he knew, sagged entirely. There they came to a stop, flapping about, waiting for a breeze, in the hot sun, miles from shore, miles from the lighthouse. Everything in the whole world seemed to stand still. The lighthouse became immovable, and the line of the distant shore became fixed. The sun was grew hotter, and everybody seemed to come very close together and to feel each other's presence,
Starting point is 06:49:08 which they had almost forgotten. McAllister's fishing line went plumbed down into the sea, but Mr. Ramsey went on reading with his legs curled under him. He was reading a little shiny book with covers mottled like a plover's egg. Now and again, as they hung about in that horrid calm, he turned a page. And James felt that each page was turned with a peculiar gesture aimed at him, now assertively, now commandingly, now with the intention of making people pity him. And all the time, as his father read and turned one after another of those little pages, James kept dreading the moment when he would look up and speak sharply to him about something or other. Why were they lagging about here, he would demand, or something quite unreasonable like that?
Starting point is 06:50:01 And if he does, James thought, then I shall take a knife and strike him to the heart. He had always kept this old symbol of taking a knife and striking his father to the heart. Only now, as he grew older, and sat staring at his father in an impotent rage. It was not him, that old man reading. whom he wanted to kill, but it was the thing that descended on him, without his knowing it, perhaps, that fierce, sudden, black-winged harpy, with its talons and its beak all cold and hard, that struck and struck at you. He could feel the beak on his bare legs, where it had struck when he was a child, and then made off, and there he was again, an old man, very sad, reading his book.
Starting point is 06:50:53 That he would kill, that he would strike to the heart. Whatever he did, and he might do anything, he felt, looking at the lighthouse and the distant shore, whether he was in a business, in a bank, a barrister, a man at the head of some enterprise, that he would fight, that he would track down and stamp out. Tyranny, despotism, he called it, making people do what they did not want to do, cutting off their right to speak. How could any of them say, but I won't? When he said, come to the lighthouse, do this, fetch me that.
Starting point is 06:51:35 The black wings spread and the hard beak tore. And then, next moment, there he sat reading his book, and he might look up, one never knew, quite reasonably. He might talk to them callisters. He might be pressing a sovereign. into some frozen old woman's hand in the street, James thought, and he might be shouting out at some fisherman's sports. He might be waving his arms in the air with excitement. Or he might sit at the head of the table, dead silent, from one end of dinner to the other.
Starting point is 06:52:11 Yes, thought James, while the boat slapped and dawdled there in the hot sun. There was a waste of snow and rock, very lonely and austere, and there he had come to feel. quite often lately, when his father said something or did something which surprised the others. There were two pairs of footprints only, his own and his fathers. They alone knew each other. What then was this terror, this hatred? Turning back among the many leaves which the past had folded in him, peering into the heart of that forest where light and shade so checker each other,
Starting point is 06:52:51 that all shape is distorted. and one blunders, now with the sun in one's eyes, now with a dark shadow. He sought an image to cool and detach, and round off his feeling in a concrete shape. Suppose then that, as a child, sitting helpless in a perambulator, or on someone's knee, he had seen a wagon crush ignorantly and innocently someone's foot. Suppose he had seen the foot first, in the grass, smooth and whole, then the wheel, and the same foot, purple, crushed. But the wheel was innocent.
Starting point is 06:53:29 So now, when his father came striding down the passage, knocking them up early in the morning to go to the lighthouse, down it came over his foot, over Cam's foot, over anybody's foot. One sat and watched it. But whose foot was he thinking of, and in what garden did all this happen? for one had settings for these scenes, trees that grew there, flowers, a certain light, a few figures. Everything tended to set itself in a garden where there was none of this gloom, none of this throwing
Starting point is 06:54:05 of hands about, people spoke in an ordinary tone of voice. They went in and out all day long. There was an old woman gossiping in the kitchen, and the blinds were sucked in and out by the breeze, All was blowing, all was growing, and over all those plates and bowls and tall brandishing red and yellow flowers, a very thin yellow veil would be drawn, like a vine leaf at night. Things became stiller and darker at night. But the leaf-like veil was so fine that lights lifted it, voices crinkled it. He could see through it a figure stooping. Here, coming close, coming close,
Starting point is 06:54:49 going away, some dress rustling, some chain tinkling. It was in this world that the wheel went over the person's foot. Something, he remembered, stayed flourished up in the air, something arid and sharp descended even there, like a blade, a scimitar, smiting through the leaves and flowers, even of that happy world, and making it shrivel and fall. It will rain, he remembered his own. father saying, you won't be able to go to the lighthouse. The lighthouse was then a silvery,
Starting point is 06:55:26 misty-looking tower with a yellow eye that opened suddenly and softly in the evening. Now, James looked at the lighthouse. He could see the whitewashed rocks, the tower, stark and straight. He could see that it was barred with black and white. He could see windows in it. He could even see washing spread on the rocks to dry. So that was the lighthouse, was it? No, the other was also the lighthouse. For nothing was simply one thing. The other lighthouse was true too. It was sometimes hardly to be seen across the bay. In the evening one looked up and saw the eye opening and shutting, and the light seemed to reach them in that airy, sunny garden where they sat. But he pulled himself up. Whenever he said they, or, a person, and then began hearing the
Starting point is 06:56:25 rustle of someone coming, the tinkle of someone going, he became extremely sensitive to the presence of whoever might be in the room. It was his father now. The strain was acute. For in one moment, if there was no breeze, his father would slap the covers of his book together and say, "'What's happening now? What are we dawdling about for here, eh?' "'As once before, he had brought his blade down among them on the terrace, "'and she had gone stiff all over, and if there had been an axe handy, a knife, "'or anything with a sharp point, he would have seized it and struck his father through the heart. "'She had gone stiff all over, and then her arm slackening,
Starting point is 06:57:12 "'so that he felt she listened to him no longer. She had risen somehow and gone away and left him there, impotent, ridiculous, sitting on the floor grasping a pair of scissors. Not a breath of wind blew. The water chuckled and gurgled in the bottom of the boat, where three or four mackerel beat their tails up and down in a pool of water, not deep enough to cover them. At any moment Mr. Ramsey, he scarcely dared look at him,
Starting point is 06:57:42 might rouse himself, shut his book and say, something sharp. But for the moment he was reading, so that James, stealthily, as if he was stealing downstairs on bare feet, afraid of waking a watchdog by a creaking board, went on thinking, what was she like, where did she go that day? He began following her from room to room, and at last they came to a room where, in a blue light, as if the reflection came from many china dishes, she talked to somebody. He listened to her. He listened to. her talking. She talked to a servant, saying simply whatever came into her head. She alone spoke the truth. To her alone could he speak it? That was the source of her everlasting attraction for him, perhaps.
Starting point is 06:58:32 She was a person to whom one could say what came into one's head. But all the time he thought of her, he was conscious of his father following his thought, surveying it, making it shiver and falter. At last he ceased to think. There he sat with his hand on the tiller in the sun, staring at the lighthouse, powerless to move, powerless to flick off these grains of misery which settled on his mind one after another. A rope seemed to bind him there, and his father had knotted it, and he could only escape by taking a knife and plunging it. But at that moment the sail swung slowly round, filled slowly.
Starting point is 06:59:15 out, the boat seemed to shake herself, and then to move off half-conscious in her sleep, and then she woke and shot through the waves. The relief was extraordinary. They all seemed to fall away from each other again, and to be at their ease, and the fishing lines slanted taut across the side of the boat. But his father did not rouse himself. He only raised his right hand mysteriously high in the air, and let it fall upon his knee again, as if he were conducting some secret symphony. Chapter 10. The sea without a stain on it, thought Lily Briscoe, still standing and looking out over the bay. The sea stretched like silk across the bay. Distance had an extraordinary power. They had been swallowed up in it, she felt. They were gone forever. They had become part of the
Starting point is 07:00:14 nature of things. It was so calm, it was so quiet. The steamer itself had vanished, but the great scroll of smoke still hung in the air, and drooped like a flag mournfully in valediction. Chapter 11. It was like that, then, the island, thought Cam, once more drawing her fingers through the waves. She had never seen it from out at sea before. It lay like that on the sea did it, with a dent in the middle and two sharp crags, and the sea swept in there, and spread away from miles and miles on either side of the island. It was very small, shaped something like a leaf stood on end. So we took a little boat, she thought, beginning to tell herself a story of adventure about escaping from a sinking ship. But, with the sea streaming through her fingers,
Starting point is 07:01:13 a spray of seaweed vanishing behind them, she did not want to tell herself seriously a story. It was the sense of adventure and escape that she wanted, for she was thinking, as the boat sailed on, how her father's anger about the points of the compass, James's obstinacy about the compact, and her own anguish. All had slipped, all had passed, all had streamed away.
Starting point is 07:01:41 What then came next? Where were they going? From her hand, ice-cold, held deep in the sea, there spurted up a fountain of joy at the change, at the escape, at the adventure, that she should be alive, that she should be there. And the drops falling from this sudden and unthinking fountain of joy fell here and there on the dark, the slumberous shapes in her mind, shapes of a world not realized but turning in their darkness, catching here and there a spark of light. Greece, Rome, Constantinople.
Starting point is 07:02:22 Small as it was and shaped something like a leaf stood on its end with the gold-sprinkled waters flowing in and about it. It had, she supposed, a place in the universe, even that little island. The old gentleman in the study, she thought, could have told her. Sometimes she strayed in from the garden, purposely to catch them at it. There they were. It might be Mr. Carmichael, or Mr. Banks, who was sitting with her father, sitting opposite each other in their low armchairs. They were crackling in front of them the pages of the times, when she came in from the garden, all in a muddle,
Starting point is 07:03:01 about something someone had said about Christ, or hearing that a mammoth had been dug up in a London street, or wondering what Napoleon was like. Then they took all this with their clean hands, They wore grey-coloured clothes, they smelt of heather, and they brushed the scraps together, turning the paper, crossing their knees, and said something now and then very brief. Just to please herself she would take a book from the shelf and stand there, watching her father write, so equally, so neatly from one side of the page to another, with a little cough now and then, or something said briefly to the other old gentleman opposite. And she thought, standing there with her book open, one could let whatever one thought
Starting point is 07:03:49 expand here like a leaf in water. And if it did well here, among the old gentleman smoking and the times crackling, then it was right. And watching her father as he wrote in his study, she thought, now sitting in the boat, he was not vain, nor a tyrant, and did not wish to make you pity him. Indeed, if he saw she was there, reading a book, he would ask her, as gently as anyone could, was there nothing he could give her? Lest this should be wrong, she looked at him reading the little book with the shiny cover mottled like a plover's egg. No, it was right. Look at him now, she wanted to say aloud to James. But James had his eye on the sale. He is a sarcastic brute, James would say. He brings the talk round to himself and his books, James would say.
Starting point is 07:04:48 He is intolerably egotistical. Worst of all, he is a tyrant. But look, she said, looking at him. Look at him now. She looked at him reading the little book with his legs curled, the little book whose yellowish pages she knew without knowing what was written on them. It was small. It was closely printed. On the fly-leaf, she knew, he had written that he had spent fifteen francs on dinner. The wine had been so much. He had given so much to the waiter. All was added up neatly at the bottom of the page. But what might be written in the book which had rounded its edges off in his pocket, she did not know. What he thought they none of them knew. But he was absorbed in it, so that when he looked up, as he did now for an instant, it was not to see
Starting point is 07:05:43 anything, it was to pin down some thought more exactly. That done, his mind flew back again, and he plunged into his reading. He read, she thought, as if he were guiding something, or wheedling a large flock of sheep, or pushing his way up and up a single narrow path, and sometimes he went fast and straight and broke his way through the bramble. And sometimes it seemed a branch struck at him. A bramble blinded him. But he was not going to let himself be beaten by that. On he went, tossing over page after page.
Starting point is 07:06:21 And she went on telling herself a story about escaping from a sinking ship, for she was safe while he sat there, safe as she felt herself when she crept in from the garden and took a book down, and the old gentleman, lowering the paper suddenly, said something very brief over the top of it about the character of Napoleon. She gazed back over the sea, at the island, but the leaf was losing its sharpness. It was very small, it was very distant. The sea was more important now than the shore.
Starting point is 07:06:57 Waves were all around them, tossing and sinking, with a log wallowing down one wave, a girl riding on another. About here, she thought, dabbling her fingers in the water, a ship had sunk, and she murmured, dreamily half asleep, how we perished, each alone. End of Section 15. Section 16 of To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This Librefrog's recording is in the public domain. Chapter 12 So much depends then, thought Lily Briscoe, looking at the sea which had scarcely a stain on it, which was so soft that the sails and the clouds seemed set in its blue. So much depends, she thought, upon distance, whether people are near us or far from us.
Starting point is 07:07:57 For her feeling for Mr. Ramsey changed as he sailed further and further across the bay. It seemed to be elongated, stretched out. He seemed to become more and more remote. He and his children seemed to be swallowed up in that blue, that distance. But here on the lawn, close at hand, Mr. Carmichael suddenly grunted. She laughed. He clawed his book up from the grass. He settled into his chair again, puffing and blowing like some sea monster.
Starting point is 07:08:32 That was different altogether, because he was so near. And now again all was quiet. They must be out of bed by this time, she supposed, looking at the house, but nothing appeared there. But then, she remembered, they had always made off directly a meal was over, on business of their own. It was all in keeping with this silence, this emptiness, and the unreality of the early morning hour.
Starting point is 07:09:01 It was a way things had sometimes, she thought, lingering for a moment and looking at the long, glittering windows and the plume of blue smoke. They became illness, before habits had spun themselves across the surface, one felt that same unreality which was so startling, felt something emerge. Life was most vivid then. One could be at one's ease. Mercifully, one need not say, very briskly, crossing the lawn to greet old Mrs. Beckwith, who would be coming out to find a corner to sit in.
Starting point is 07:09:37 Oh, good morning, Mrs. Beckwith. What a lovely day. Are you going to be so bold as to sit in the sun? Jasper's hidden the chairs. Do let me find you one. And all the rest of the usual chatter. One need not speak at all. One glided. One shook off one's sails. There was a good deal of movement. movement in the bay, boats were starting off, between things, beyond things.
Starting point is 07:10:05 Empty it was not, but full to the brim. She seemed to be standing up to the lips in some substance, to move and float and sink in it. Yes, for these waters were unfathomably deep. Into them had spilled so many lives. The Ramses, the children's, and all sorts of waifs and strays. of things besides. A washerwoman with her basket, a rook, a red-hot poker, the purples and grey greens of flowers, some common feeling which held the whole together. It was some such feeling of completeness, perhaps, which, ten years ago, standing almost where she stood now,
Starting point is 07:10:50 had made her say that she must be in love with the place. Love had a thousand shapes. There might be lovers whose gift it was to choose out the elements of things and place them together, and so, giving them a wholeness not theirs in life, make of some scene or meeting of people, all now gone and separate, one of those globed, compacted things over which thought lingers and love plays. Her eyes rested on the brown speck of Mr. Ramsey's sailing boat. They would be at the lighthouse by lunchtime, she supposed. But the wind had been. had freshened, and, as the sky changed slightly and the sea changed slightly, and the boats altered their positions, the view, which a moment before had seemed miraculously fixed,
Starting point is 07:11:41 was now unsatisfactory. The wind had blown the trail of smoke about. There was something displeasing about the placing of the ships. The disproportion there seemed to upset some harmony in her own mind. She felt an obscure distress. It was confirmed when she turned to her picture. She had been wasting her morning. For whatever reason she could not achieve that razor edge of balance between two opposite forces, Mr. Ramsey and the picture, which was necessary. There was perhaps something wrong with the design.
Starting point is 07:12:17 Was it, she wondered, that the line of the wall wanted breaking? Was it that the mass of the trees was too heavy? She smiled ironically, for had she not she not. thought, when she began, that she had solved her problem. What was the problem, then? She must try to get hold of something that evaded her. It evaded her when she thought of Mrs. Ramsey. It evaded her now when she thought of her picture. Phrases came, visions came, beautiful pictures, beautiful phrases. But what she wished to get hold of was that very jar on the nerves, the thing itself before it has been made anything.
Starting point is 07:13:00 Get that and start afresh. Get that and start afresh, she said desperately, pitching herself firmly again before her easel. It was a miserable machine, an inefficient machine, she thought, the human apparatus for painting or for feeling. It always broke down at the critical moment. Heroically, one must force it on. She stared, frowning. There was the hedge, sure enough, but one got nothing by soliciting urgently.
Starting point is 07:13:34 One got only a glare in the eye from looking at the line of the wall, or from thinking. She wore a grey hat. She was astonishingly beautiful. Let it come, she thought, if it will. For there are moments when one can neither think nor feel. And if one can neither think nor feel, she thought, where is one? Here on the grass, on the ground, she thought, sitting down and examining with her brush a little colony of plantains. For the lawn was very rough.
Starting point is 07:14:07 Here, sitting on the world, she thought, for she could not shake herself free from the sense that everything this morning was happening for the first time, perhaps for the last time, as a traveller, even though he is half asleep, knows, looking out of the train window, that he must look now, for he will never see that town, or that mule-cart, or that woman at work in the fields, again. The lawn was the world. They were up here together on this exalted station, she thought, looking at old Mr. Carmichael, who seemed, though they had not said a word all this time, to share her thoughts. And she would never see him again, perhaps. He was growing old. Also, she remembered, smiling at the slipper that dangled from his foot, he was growing famous. People said that his poetry was so beautiful.
Starting point is 07:15:03 They went and published things he had written forty years ago. There was a famous man now called Carmichael, she smiled, thinking how many shapes one person might wear, how he was that in the newspapers, but here the same as he had always been. He looked the same, greyer rather. Yes, he looked the same, but somebody had said, she recalled, that when he had heard of Andrew Ramsey's death, he was killed in a second by a shell, he should have been a great mathematician.
Starting point is 07:15:37 Mr. Carmichael had lost all interest in life. What did it mean that, she wondered, had he marched through Trafalgar Square, grasping a big stick. Had he turned pages over and over without reading them, sitting in his room in St John's Wood alone. She did not know what he had done, when he heard that Andrew was killed,
Starting point is 07:16:01 but she felt it in him all the same. They only mumbled at each other on staircases. They looked up at the sky and said, it will be fine or it won't be fine. But this was one way of knowing people, she thought, to know the outline, not the detail, to sit in one's garden and look at the slopes of a hill running purple down into the distant heather. She knew him in that way. She knew that he had changed somehow. She had never read a line of his poetry. She thought that she knew how it went,
Starting point is 07:16:37 though, slowly and sonorously. It was seasoned and mellow. It was about the desert and the camel, It was about the palm tree and the sunset. It was extremely impersonal. It said something about death. It said very little about love. There was an impersonality about him. He wanted very little of other people. Had he not always lurched rather awkwardly past the drawing-room window
Starting point is 07:17:07 with some newspaper under his arm, trying to avoid Mrs. Ramsey, whom, for some reason, he did not much like? On that account, of course, she would always try to make him stop. He would bow to her. He would halt unwillingly and bow profoundly. Annoyed that he did not want anything of her, Mrs. Ramsey would ask him. Lily could hear her.
Starting point is 07:17:32 Wouldn't he like a coat, a rug, a newspaper? No, he wanted nothing. Here he bowed. There was some quality in her which he did not much like. It was perhaps her masterfulness, her positiveness, something matter-of-fact in her. She was so direct. A noise drew her attention to the drawing-room window, the squeak of a hinge. The light breeze was toying with the window.
Starting point is 07:18:02 There must have been people who disliked her very much, Lily thought. Yes, she realised that the drawing-room step was empty, but it had no effect on her whatever. did not want Mrs. Ramsey now. People who thought her too sure, too drastic. Also, her beauty offended people, probably. How monotonous, they would say, and the same always. They preferred another type, the dark, the vivacious. Then she was weak with her husband. She let him make those scenes. Then she was reserved. Nobody knew exactly what had happened to her. And, to go back to Mr. Carmichael and his dislike, one could not imagine Mrs. Ramsey's standing painting, lying reading, a whole morning on the lawn. It was unthinkable. Without saying a word,
Starting point is 07:18:58 the only token of her errand, a basket on her arm, she went off to the town, to the poor, to sit in some stuffy little bedroom. Often and often Lily had seen her go silently in the midst of some game, some discussion, with her basket on her arm, very upright. She had noted her return. She had thought, half laughing, she was so methodical with the teacups, half moved, her beauty took one's breath away, eyes that are closing in pain have looked on you. You have been with them there. And then Mrs. Ramsey would be annoyed because somebody was late, or the butter not fresh,
Starting point is 07:19:41 or the teapot chipped. And all the time she was saying that the butter was not fresh, one would be thinking of Greek temples, and how beauty had been with them there in that stuffy little room. She never talked of it. She went punctually, directly. It was her instinct to go, an instinct like the swallows for the south, the artichokes for the sun, turning her infallibly to the human race, making her nest in its heart. And this, like all instincts, was a little distressing to people who did not share it, to Mr. Carmichael, perhaps, to herself certainly. Some notion was in both of them about the ineffectiveness of action, the supremacy of thought. Her going was a reproach to them, gave a different twist to the world,
Starting point is 07:20:33 so that they were led to protest, seeing their own prepossessions disappear, and clutched them vanishing. Charles Tansley did that, too. It was part of the reason why one disliked him. He upset the proportions of one's world. And what had happened to him, she wondered, idly stirring the plantains with her brush. He had got his fellowship. He had married.
Starting point is 07:20:59 He lived at Golders Green. She had gone one day into a hall and heard him speaking during the war. He was denouncing something. He was condemning somebody. He was preaching brotherly love. And all she felt was, how could he love his kind, who did not know one picture from another, who had stood behind her smoking shag,
Starting point is 07:21:22 fivepence an ounce, Miss Briscoe, and making it his business to tell her, women can't write, women can't paint, not so much that he believed it, as that for some odd reason he wished it. There he was, lean and red and raucous, preaching love from a platform. There were ants crawling about among the plantains, which she disturbed with her brush, red, energetic, shiny ants, rather like Charles Tansley.
Starting point is 07:21:53 She had looked at him ironically from her seat in the half-empty hall, pumping love into that chilly space, and suddenly there was the old cask or whatever it was, bobbing up and down among the waves, and Mrs. Ramsey looking for her spectacle case among the pebbles. "'Oh dear, what a nuisance! Lost again! Don't bother, Mr. Tansley. I lose thousands every summer.' At which he pressed his chin back against his collar, as if afraid to sanction such exaggeration, but could stand it in her whom he liked, and smiled very charmingly. He must have confided in her on one of those long expeditions, when people got separated and walked back alone. He was educating his little sister, Mrs. Ramsey had told her.
Starting point is 07:22:41 It was immensely to his credit. Her own idea of him was grotesque, Lily knew well, stirring the plantains with her brush. Half one's notions of other people were, after all, grotesque. They served private purposes of one's own. Heeded for her instead of a whipping boy. She found herself flagellating his lean flanks when she was out of temper. If she wanted to be serious about him, she had to help herself to Mrs. Ramsey's sayings, to look at him through her eyes. She raised a little mountain for the ants to climb over. She reduced them to a frenzy of indecision by this interference in their cosmogony.
Starting point is 07:23:25 Some ran this way, others that. One wanted fifty pairs of eyes to see with. she reflected. Fifty pairs of eyes were not enough to get round that one woman with, she thought. Among them must be one that was stone-blind to her beauty. One wanted some most secret sense, fine as air, with which to steal through keyholes and surround her where she sat knitting, talking, sitting silent in the window alone, which took her to itself and treasured up like the air which held the smoke of the steamer, her thoughts, her imaginations, her desires. What did the hedge mean to her? What did the garden mean to her? What did it mean to her when a wave
Starting point is 07:24:13 broke? Lily looked up, as she had seen Mrs. Ramsey look up. She too heard a wave falling on the beach. And then what stirred and trembled in her mind when the children cried, "'How's that? How's that?' "'Cricketing.' She would stop knitting for a second. She would look intent. Then she would lapse again, and suddenly Mr. Ramsey stopped dead in his pacing in front of her,
Starting point is 07:24:40 and some curious shock passed through her and seemed to rock her in profound agitation on its breast. When stopping there he stood over her and looked down at her. Lily could see him. He stretched out his hand and raised, her from her chair. It seemed somehow as if he had done it before, as if he had once bent in the same way and raised her from a boat, which, lying a few inches off some island, had required that the ladies should thus be helped on shore by the gentlemen. An old-fashioned scene that was,
Starting point is 07:25:16 which required, very nearly, crinolines and peg-top trousers. Letting herself be helped by him, Mrs. Ramsey had thought, Lily supposed, the time has come now. Yes, she would say it now. Yes, she would marry him. And she stepped slowly, quietly on shore. Probably she said one word only, letting her hand rest still in his. I will marry you, she might have said, with her hand in his, but no more. Time after time the same thrill had passed between us.
Starting point is 07:25:53 them. Obviously it had, Lily thought, smoothing away for her aunts. She was not inventing. She was only trying to smooth out something she had been given years ago folded up, something she had seen. For in the rough and tumble of daily life, with all those children about, all those visitors, one had constantly a sense of repetition, of one thing falling where another had fallen, and so setting up an echo, which chimed in the air and made it full of vibrations. But it would be a mistake, she thought, thinking how they walked off together, arm in arm, past the greenhouse, to simplify their relationship.
Starting point is 07:26:37 It was no monotony of bliss, she with her impulses and quicknesses, he with his shudders and glooms. Oh no, the bedroom door would slam violently. early in the morning. He would start from the table in a temper. He would whizz his plate through the window. Then, all through the house, there would be a sense of doors slamming and blinds fluttering, as if a gusty wind were blowing, and people scudded about trying in a hasty way to fasten hatches and make things ship-shape. She had met Paul Rayleigh like that one day on the stairs. They had laughed and laughed like a couple of children. All because Mr. Ramsey, finding an earwig in his milk at breakfast,
Starting point is 07:27:23 had sent the whole thing flying through the air onto the terrace outside. An earwig, prou murmured, awe-struck, in his milk. Other people might find centipedes, but he had built round him such a fence of sanctity and occupied the space with such a demeanour of majesty that an earwig in his milk was a monster. But it tired, Mrs. Ramsey, It cowed her a little, the plates whizzing and the doors slamming.
Starting point is 07:27:54 And there would fall between them sometimes, long, rigid silences, when, in a state of mind which annoyed Lily in her, half plaintive, half resentful, she seemed unable to surmount the tempest calmly, or to laugh as they laughed, but in her weariness perhaps concealed something. She brooded and sat silent. After a time he would hang stealthily about the places where she was, roaming under the window where
Starting point is 07:28:24 she sat writing letters or talking, for she would take care to be busy when he passed, and evade him and pretend not to see him. Then he would turn smooth as silk, affable, abain, and try to win her so. Still she would hold off, and now she would assert for a brief season some of those prides and heirs the dew of her beauty, which she was generally utterly without, would turn her head, would look so over her shoulder, always with some minta, Paul or William Banks at her side.
Starting point is 07:29:01 At length, standing outside the group, the very figure of a famished wolfhound. Lily got up off the grass and stood looking at the steps, at the window where she had seen him. He would say her name, once only, for all the world like a wolf barking in the snow. But still she held back, and he would say it once more, and this time something in the tone would rouse her,
Starting point is 07:29:28 and she would go to him, leaving them all of a sudden, and they would walk off together among the pear trees, the cabbages and the raspberry beds. They would have it out together. But with what attitudes and with what words? Such a dignity was theirs in this relationship, that, turning away, she and Paul and Minto would hide their curiosity and their discomfort, and begin picking flowers, throwing balls, chattering, until it was time for dinner, and there they were, he at one end of the table, she at the other, as usual. Why don't some of you take up botany? With all those arms and legs, why doesn't one of you? So they would talk as usual, laughing among the children. All would be as usual, save only for some quiver, as of a blade in the air, which came and went between them,
Starting point is 07:30:24 as if the usual sight of the children sitting round their superplates had freshened itself in their eyes, after that hour among the pears and the cabbages. Especially, Lily thought, Mrs. Ramsey would glance at Prue. She sat in the middle between brothers and her. and sisters, always occupied, it seemed, seeing that nothing went wrong so that she scarcely spoke herself. How Prue must have blamed herself for that earwig in the milk! How white she had gone when Mr. Ramsey threw his plate through the window! How she drooped under those long silences between them!
Starting point is 07:31:03 Anyhow, her mother now would seem to be making it up to her, assuring her that everything was well, promising her that one of these days that same happiness would be hers. She had enjoyed it for less than a year, however. She had let the flowers fall from her basket, Lily thought, screwing up her eyes and standing back as if to look at her picture, which she was not touching, however, with all her faculties in a trance, frozen over superficially but moving underneath with extreme speed. She let her flowers fall from her basket, scathing. scattered and tumbled them onto the grass, and reluctantly and hesitatingly, but without question or complaint, had she not the faculty of obedience to perfection, went too.
Starting point is 07:31:52 Down fields, across valleys, white, flower-strewn, that was how she would have painted it. The hills were austere. It was rocky, it was steep. The waves sounded hoarse on the stones beneath. They went, the three of them together, Mrs. Ramsey walking rather fast in front, as if she expected to meet someone round the corner. Suddenly, the window at which she was looking
Starting point is 07:32:21 was whitened by some light stuff behind it. At last then somebody had come into the drawing-room, somebody was sitting in the chair. For heaven's sake, she prayed, let them sit still there and not come flounder, wandering out to talk to her. Mercifully, whoever it was, stayed still inside, had settled by some stroke of luck
Starting point is 07:32:44 so as to throw an odd-shaped triangular shadow over the step. It altered the composition of the picture a little. It was interesting. It might be useful. Her mood was coming back to her. One must keep on looking, without for a second relaxing the intensity of emotion, the determination not to be put off, not to be bamboozled.
Starting point is 07:33:09 One must hold the scene, so, in a vice, and let nothing come in and spoil it. One wanted, she thought, dipping her brush deliberately, to be on a level with ordinary experience, to feel simply, that's a chair, that's a table, and yet, at the same time, it's a miracle, it's an ecstasy. The problem might be so. after all. Ah, but what had happened? Some wave of white went over the window-pane.
Starting point is 07:33:41 The air must have stirred some flounce in the room. Her heart leapt at her and seized her and tortured her. Mrs. Ramsey! Mrs. Ramsey! she cried, feeling the old horror come back, to want and want and not to have. Could she inflict that still? And then, quietly, as if she refrained, that too became part of ordinary experience, was on a level with the chair, with the table. Mrs. Ramsey, it was part of her perfect goodness, sat there quite simply, in the chair, flicked her needles to and fro, knitted her reddish-brown stocking, cast her shadow on the step.
Starting point is 07:34:29 There she sat. and as if she had something she must share, yet could hardly leave her easel, so full her mind was of what she was thinking, of what she was seeing. Lily went past Mr Carmichael, holding her brush to the edge of the lawn. Where was that boat now? And Mr. Ramsey? She wanted him. Chapter 13
Starting point is 07:34:54 Mr. Ramsey had almost done reading. One hand hovered over the page. as if to be in readiness to turn it the very instant he had finished it. He sat there bareheaded, with the wind blowing his hair about, extraordinarily exposed to everything. He looked very old. He looked, James thought, getting his head now against the lighthouse, now against the waste of waters running away into the open, like some old stone lying on the sand.
Starting point is 07:35:28 He looked as if he had become physically what was always at the back of both the same, their minds, that loneliness which was for both of them the truth about things. He was reading very quickly now, as if he were eager to get to the end. Indeed, they were very close to the lighthouse now. There it loomed up, stark and straight, glaring white and black, and one could see the waves breaking in white splinters like smashed glass upon the rocks. One could see lines and creases in the rocks. One could see the windows clearly, a dab of white on one of them, and a little tuft of green on the rock. A man had come out and looked at them through a glass and gone in again.
Starting point is 07:36:14 So it was like that, James thought, the lighthouse one had seen across the bay all these years. It was a stark tower on a bare rock. It satisfied him. It confirmed some obscure feeling of his about his own character. the old ladies, he thought, thinking of the garden at home, went dragging their chairs about on the lawn. Old Mrs. Beckwith, for example, was always saying how nice it was and how sweet it was, and how they ought to be so proud and they ought to be so happy. But as a matter of fact, James thought, looking at the lighthouse stood there on its rock, it's like that.
Starting point is 07:36:57 He looked at his father reading fiercely with his legs curled tight. They shared that knowledge. We are driving before a gale. We must sink, he began saying to himself, half aloud, exactly as his father said it. Nobody seemed to have spoken for an age. Cam was tired of looking at the sea. Little bits of black cork had floated past. The fish were dead in the bottom of the boat.
Starting point is 07:37:27 Still her father read, and James looked at him, and she looked at him, and they vowed that they would fight tyranny to the death, and he went on reading quite unconscious of what they thought. It was thus that he escaped, she thought. Yes, with his great forehead and his great nose, holding his little mottled book firmly in front of him, he escaped. You might try to lay hands on him, but then, like a bird, he spread his wings. He floated off to settle out of your reach somewhere, far away on some desolate stump.
Starting point is 07:38:02 She gazed at the immense expanse of the sea. The island had grown so small that it scarcely looked like a leaf any longer. It looked like the top of a rock which some wave bigger than the rest would cover. Yet in its frailty were all those paths, those terraces, those bedrooms, all those innumerable things. But as just before sleep, things simplify themselves so that only one of all the myriad details has power to assert itself. So, she felt, looking drowsily at the island,
Starting point is 07:38:38 all those paths and terraces and bedrooms were fading and disappearing, and nothing was left but a pale blue sensor, swinging rhythmically this way and that across her mind. It was a hanging garden, it was a valley full of birds and flowers and antelopes. She was falling asleep. Come now, said Mr. Ramsey. suddenly shutting his book.
Starting point is 07:39:04 Come where? To what extraordinary adventure? She woke with a start. To land somewhere, to climb somewhere. Where is he leading them? For after his immense silence, the words startled them. But it was absurd. He was hungry, he said.
Starting point is 07:39:24 It was time for lunch. Besides, look, he said, There's the lighthouse. We're almost there. "'He's doing very well,' said McAllister, praising James. "'He's keeping her very steady.' "'But his father never praised him,' James thought grimly. Mr. Ramsey opened the parcel and shared out the sandwiches between them.
Starting point is 07:39:48 Now he was happy, eating bread and cheese with these fishermen. He would have liked to live in a cottage and lounge about in the harbour, spitting with the other old men, James thought, watching him slice his cheese into thin yellow sheets with his penknife. This is right, this is it, Cam kept feeling, as she peeled her hard-boiled egg. Now she felt as she did in the study when the old men were reading the times. Now I can go on thinking whatever I like, and I shan't fall over a precipice or be drowned, for there he is, keeping his eye on me, she thought.
Starting point is 07:40:25 At the same time they were sailing so fast along by the rocks, that it was very exciting. It seemed as if they were doing two things at once. They were eating their lunch here in the sun, and they were also making for safety in a great storm after a shipwreck. Would the water last? Would the provisions last? she asked herself, telling herself a story, but knowing at the same time what was the truth. They would soon be out of it, Mr. Ramsey was saying to old McAllister, but their children would see some strange things. "'Mcalester said he was seventy-five last March.
Starting point is 07:41:01 "'Mr. Ramsey was 71. "'Mcalister said he had never seen a doctor. "'He had never lost a tooth. "'And that's the way I'd like my children to live. "'Cam was sure that her father was thinking that, "'for he stopped her throwing a sandwich into the sea "'and told her, as if he were thinking of the fishermen and how they lived, "'that if she did not want it, she should put it back into the parcel.
Starting point is 07:41:25 "'She should not waste it. He said it so wisely, as if he knew so well all the things that happened in the world, that she put it back at once. And then he gave her, from his own parcel, a gingerbread nut, as if he were a great Spanish gentleman, she thought, handing a flower to a lady at a window, so courteous his manner was. He was shabby and simple, eating bread and cheese, and yet he was leading them on a great expedition,
Starting point is 07:41:54 where, for all she knew, they would be drowned. That was where she sunk, said McAllister's boy suddenly. Three men were drowned where we are now, the old man said. He had seen them clinging to the mast himself. And Mr. Ramsey, taking a look at the spot, was about, James and Cammer afraid, to burst out, but I beneath a rougher sea. And if he did, they could not bear it. They would shriek aloud.
Starting point is 07:42:23 they could not endure another explosion of the passion that boiled in him. But to their surprise, all he said was, as if he thought to himself, but why make a fuss about that? Naturally men are drowned in a storm, but it is a perfectly straightforward affair, and the depths of the sea. He sprinkled the crumbs from his sandwich paper over them,
Starting point is 07:42:48 are only water after all. Then, having lighted his pipe, he took out his, his watch. He looked at it attentively. He made, perhaps, some mathematical calculation. At last he said triumphantly, "'Well done!' James had steered them like a born sailor. "'There,' Cam thought, addressing herself silently to James, "'you've got it at last. For she knew that this was what James had been wanting, and she knew that now he had got it, he was so pleased that he would not look at her or his
Starting point is 07:43:23 father or at anyone. There he sat with his hand on the tiller, sitting bolt upright, looking rather sulky and frowning slightly. He was so pleased that he was not going to let anybody share a grain of his pleasure. His father had praised him. They must think that he was perfectly indifferent. But you've got it now, Cam thought. They had tacked, and they were sailing swiftly, buoyantly, on long rocking waves, which handed them on from one to another, with an extraordinary lilt and exhilaration beside the reef. On the left a row of rocks showed brown through the water which thinned and became greener, and on one, a higher rock, a wave incessantly broke and spurted a little column of drops which
Starting point is 07:44:13 fell down in a shower. One could hear the slap of the water and the patter of falling drops, and a kind of hushing and hissing sound from the waves, rolling and gambling and slapping the rocks, as if they were wild creatures who were perfectly free, and tossed and tumbled and sported like this forever. Now they could see two men on the lighthouse, watching them and making ready to meet them. Mr. Ramsey buttoned his coat and turned up his trousers. He took the large, badly packed, brown paper parcel which Nancy had got ready and sat with it on his knee. Thus, in complete readiness to land, he sat looking back at the island.
Starting point is 07:44:56 With his long-sighted eyes, perhaps he could see the dwindled leaf-like shape, standing on end on a plate of gold quite clearly. What could he see? Cam wondered. It was all a blur to her. What was he thinking now? She wondered. What was it he sought so fixedly, so intently, so silently. They watched him, both of them, sitting bareheaded with his parcel on his knee, staring and staring at the frail blue shape, which seemed like the vapour of something that had burnt itself away. "'What do you want?' they both wanted to ask. They both wanted to say, ask us anything and we will give it you.'
Starting point is 07:45:40 But he did not ask them anything. He sat and looked at the island, and he might be thinking, we perished each alone. Or he might be thinking, I have reached it, I have found it, but he said nothing. Then he put on his hat. Bring those parcels, he said, nodding his head at the things Nancy had done up for them to take to the lighthouse. The parcels for the lighthouse men, he said. He rose and stood in the bow of the boat, very straight and tall. For all the world, James thought, as if he was saying, there is no God.
Starting point is 07:46:19 And Cam thought, as if he were leaping into space, and they both rose to follow him as he sprang, lightly like a young man, holding his parcel, onto the rock. Chapter 14. He must have reached it, said Lily Brisco aloud, feeling suddenly completely tired out. For the lighthouse had become almost invisible, had melted away into a blue haze, and the effort of looking at it, and the effort of thinking of him landing there, which Both seemed to be one and the same effort, had stretched her body and mind to the utmost. Ah, but she was relieved. Whatever she had wanted to give him, when he left her that morning, she had given him at last.
Starting point is 07:47:07 "'He has landed,' she said aloud. "'It is finished.' Then, surging up, puffing slightly, old Mr. Carmichael stood beside her, looking like an old pagan god, shaggy, with weeds in his hair, and the Trident, it was only a French novel, in his hand. He stood by her on the edge of the lawn, swaying a little in his bulk, and said, shading his eyes with his hand,
Starting point is 07:47:35 they will have landed. And she felt that she had been right. They had not needed to speak. They had been thinking the same things, and he had answered her without her asking him anything. He stood there as if he was spreading his hands over all the weakness and suffering of things. mankind. She thought he was surveying, tolerantly and compassionately, their final destiny.
Starting point is 07:48:00 Now he has crowned the occasion, she thought, when his hand slowly fell, as if she had seen him let fall from his great height, a wreath of violets and asphidels, which, fluttering slowly, lay at length upon the earth. Quickly, as if she were recalled by something over there, she turned to her canvas. There it was, her picture. Yes, with all its greens and blues, its lines running up and across, its attempt at something.
Starting point is 07:48:33 It would be hung in the attics, she thought. It would be destroyed. But what did that matter? She asked herself, taking up her brush again. She looked at the steps. They were empty. She looked at her canvas. It was blurred.
Starting point is 07:48:50 With a sudden intensity, as if she saw it clear for a second, she drew a line there, in the centre. It was done. It was finished. Yes, she thought, laying down her brush in extreme fatigue. I have had my vision. End of Section 16. End off to the lighthouse by Virginia Woolf.

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