Quotes About Isolation
To love makes one solitary, she thought. She could tell nobody, not even Septimus now...
~ Virginia Woolf
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O amor torna a gente solitária, pensou.
~ Virginia Woolf
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But when the door shuts on us, all that vanishes. The shell–like covering which our souls have excreted to house themselves, to make for themselves a shape distinct from others, is broken, and there is left of all these wrinkles and roughnesses a central oyster of perceptiveness, an enormous eye. How beautiful a street is in winter!
~ Virginia Woolf
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Never had any boy begged apples as Orlando begged paper; nor sweetmeats as he begged ink. Stealing away from talk and games, he had hidden himself behind curtains, in priest's holes, or in the cupboard behind his mother's bedroom which had a great hole in the floor and smelt horribly of starling's dung, with an inkhorn in one hand, a pen in another, and on his knee a roll of paper.
~ Virginia Woolf
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Septimus has been working too hard - that was all she could say to her own mother. To love makes one solitary, she thought.
~ Virginia Woolf
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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; he looked as if he had become physically what was always at the back of both of their minds—that loneliness which was for both of them the truth about things.
~ Virginia Woolf
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Bien des choses se sont détachées de moi. J'ai survécu à certain désirs; j'ai perdu des amis, les uns par la mort, d'autres par ma simple incapacité à traverser la rue.
~ Virginia Woolf
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Scientifically speaking, the flesh was melted off the world. His body was macerated until only the nerve fibers were left. It was spread like a veil upon a rock.
~ Virginia Woolf
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She tapped on the window with her embossed hairbrush. They were too far off to hear. The drone of the trees was in their ears; the chirp of birds; other incidents of garden life, inaudible, invisible to her in the bedroom, absorbed them. Isolated on a green island, hedged about with snowdrops, laid with a counterpane of puckered silk, the innocent island floated under her window. Only George lagged behind.
~ Virginia Woolf
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Alone, over my dead fire, I tend to see the thin places in my own stories.
~ Virginia Woolf
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And when the elderly man refused to listen and mumbled on, an odd image came to his mind of a lighthouse besieged by the flying bodies of lost birds, who were dashed senseless, by the gale, against the glass. He had a strange sensation that he was both lighthouse and bird; he was steadfast and brilliant; and at the same time he was whirled, with all other things, senseless against the glass.
~ Virginia Woolf
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It was only by scorning all she met that she kept herself from tears, and the friction of people brushing past her was evidently painful.
~ Virginia Woolf
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En cierta manera, esto era su desastre, su desdicha. Era su castigo el ver hundirse y desaparecer aquí a un hombre, allá a una mujer, en esa profunda oscuridad, mientras ella estaba obligada a permanecer aquí con su vestido de noche.
~ Virginia Woolf
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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?
~ Virginia Woolf
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When the storm crosses the marsh and sweeps over me where I lie in the ditch unregarded I need no words.
~ Virginia Woolf
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you have neither wife nor child (without any sexual feeling, she longed to cherish that loneliness)...
~ Virginia Woolf
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She lives in dreams, alone.
~ Virginia Woolf
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You have no one who has any sort of consideration for you. You have had patience and endurance till I am sick of the virtues, and what have they done for you? Half-killed you.
~ Virginia Woolf
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Clarissa had a theory in those days - they had heaps of theories, always theories, as young people have. It was to explain the feeling they had of dissatisfaction; not knowing people; not being known. For how could they know each other? You met every day; then not for six months, or years. It was unsatisfactory, they agreed, how little one knew people.
~ Virginia Woolf
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She had a sense of being past everything, through everything, out of everything, as she helped 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.
~ Virginia Woolf
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I am alone, said Orlando, aloud since there was no one to hear.
~ Virginia Woolf
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To love makes one solitary, she thought.
~ Virginia Woolf
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Beautiful,' [his wife] would murmur, nudging Septimus that he might see. But beauty was behind a pane of glass. Even taste had no relish to him. He put down his cup on the little marble table. He looked at people outside; happy they seemed, collecting in the middle of the street, shouting, laughing, squabbling over nothing. But he could not taste, he could not feel. In the tea-shop among the tables and the chattering waiters the appalling fear came over him--he could not feel.
~ Virginia Woolf
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the liftman in the tube is an eternal necessity...
~ Virginia Woolf
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