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Virginia Woolf : Mrs
Dalloway
Mrs
Dalloway was published in 1925. It was Virginia Woolfs
fourth novel and, together with To the Lighthouse (1927)
and The Waves (1931), represent the peak of her
achievement as a novelist. In her previous novels, The
Voyage Out (1915), Night and Day (1919) and Jacobs
Room (1922), Virginia Woolf had been working towards a
new type of fiction, along the lines of such modernist
writers as Joyce and Proust; a novel which was understood
as a breakthrough from the premises of the prevailing
realism such as was practised by the leading novelist of
the British literary establishment, notably Bennet and
Galsworthy.
The main lines of this new movement, or this new mood,
since it pointed to a new concept of life and art, were a
sense of displacement, of alienation from the old world
of Victorian values solidly established and apparently
unmovable.
After the shock of the First World War, human nature
changed in the words of Virginia Woolf. It was no longer
possible to believe in the old creeds such as religion or
the Empire, the basic goodness of social institutions,
the traditional family, the old Protestant ethic of work
and thrift, or even to maintain the faith in human reason.
The old liberal optimism with its basic foundation on
human personality and the deeds it could achieve was
definitely shattered. Consequently, there was a movement
away from the external world of action to the inner world
of being; a preoccupation with the inner workings of the
mind and the complexities of human relationships; a
complex and tentative probing through the world of
sensation towards the reality hidden under each
subjectivity. In these circumstances, the traditional
narrative tools, such as plot, character creation, time
development, authorial omniscience were but useless tools.
A new language and a whole set of techniques had to be
created anew to deal with a world in which time was no
longer felt as linear, the mind a blank page on which
myriads of impressions impinge upon.
Virginia Woolf takes up this challenge in Mrs Dalloway.
According to her own words in her diary, she intends to
compress her world view in the 200 pages of her novel.
I want, she says, to give life and
death, sanity and insanity; I want to criticise the
social system, and show it at work at its most intense.
So far her words do not differ greatly from any statement
of intentions of any great novelist. But she adds to her
vision a new design in which all the parts will fit
together, through what she calls my tunnelling process by
which she tells the past by instalments, unifying the
different characters of her picture through a bending of
time and a narrative technique which fuses the interior
monologue with authorial commentary.
The novel, within the framework of twenty four hours in
London, consists of two intertwined lines of development,
having for centres of interest first Mrs Dalloway,
outwardly the perf ect London hostess, and secondly
Septimus Sinith, a shell-shocked ex-soldier. These two
sets of characters and incident develop alternately,
coinciding momentarily at different points in space and
time made concrete by objects, people and scenes which
flash across the consciousness of the principal
characters in both series. The Prime Ministers car,
an aeroplane spelling out an advertisement in the sky, a
little girl playing in Regents Park, an old woman
singing by an underground station or a mere impression of
kaleidoscopic changes due to the lights and shadows. And
each time the author abandons one series to follow
another. Thus, on the one hand Clarissa Dalloway, after
going to buy flowers for her party, meets Peter Walsh who
has been, and still is, in love with her. He roams
aimlessly about London; Mr Dallowy, with another friend
of Clarissas, lunches with Lady Bruton; Elizabeth,
Clarissas daughter, goes shopping with Miss Killman,
an old maid who gives her history lessons and tries to
inculcate piety. That evening all these characters,
forgather with many others at Mrs Dalloways party.
The same day, Septimus Smith and his wife Rezia go for a
walk in Regents Park before visiting Dr. Bradshaw,
a specialist in nervous diseases who advises sending
Septimus to a mental home. When the latter is sent for
that same evening he throws himself out of the window.
The Bradshaws, guests at the Dalloways party, tell
the story of the suicide, bringing together the two lines
of fate and the central idea of death. Originally Woolf
had conceived of an even closer fusion by making Mrs.
Dalloway kill herself at the end of the party.
This framework is only a pretext. What is actually
revealed to us is the whole of Clarissa Dalloways
life and that of Septimus Smith, echoing one another, not
just as they have lived, of course, but as, accumulated
in the protagonists mind, they fill and colour and
affect their present existence, what they do and what
they are. This integration of past with present, through
memory and sensation, is the discovery of Virginia Woolf.
Thus, by a succession of interior monologues, set off by
some sensation which brings back its homologue from the
past and, with it, an associated train of places and
people, feelings and thoughts, we discover in Clarissa,
on the one hand, her parents summer home at Bourton,
her 18-year-old self, her passionate relationship with
Peter Walsh and Sally Seton, her giving-way to Dalloway;
and on the other, Westminster and her life as a mother
and wife of a mediocre politician, and her unabridged gap
between desire and reality. By the same process we know
of Septimus painful war experiences, his marriage,
and final collapse, due to his inability to feel, an
experience that Virginia Woolf herself painfully admitted
to have endured in her periods of unrest.
Even from this brief summary, which misrepresents the
flashbacks by depriving them of their wealth of
impressions and all the intellectual reverberations that
make them meditations in depth, we can see the sort of
relation that the author makes in the lives of the heroes.
She retains only her loves and marriages, the reactions
to life imposed on them by society and the moments that
subjectively have importance and relevance for them,
minimal as they may seem to an observer. She is trying to
portray the hidden, the inner life, the depths of that
leafencumbered forest, "the soul". And this is
explored by the unconstrained consciousness of the heroes.
They lost themselves in time, to find themselves in
timelessness abandoning their outer appearance, the
surface they present to people and to things: Clarissa,
the respected wife and dominating mother; Septimus, an
odd and possibly dangerous man. Then they recover their
confused and mysterious wholeness in which loves and
hates are at once fleeting and eternal, aspirations
infinite, judgements contradictory and loneliness a
prison peopled with ghosts.
The casual and meaningless way in which the heroes
lives are reconstructed reveals the shallowness of
apparent contacts and, on the other hand, emphasises the
profound unity that comes from participation in the
inward experience of life in its moments of "revelation".
These beings, Clarissa and Septimus, not only communicate
with one another through identical emotions, but are
superimposed on one another. Septimus, through his
neurosis, amplifies all Clarissas reactions and
plays in the novel the role of an echo chamber. The
explosion of the Prime Ministers car startles
Clarissa, who thinks of a pistol shot; for Septimus, 'The
world has raised its whip; where will it descend?' Life
is for Clarissa something that one is constantly making
up, building around one, creating every moment afresh in
its unique novelty. And the hallucinated vision of
Septimus, with its exaggerated yearning for love and
beauty is of the same nature. Identical, too, are their
alternations of joy and terror which, in the form of
loneliness and love, apprehension of death and ecstatic
delight in existence, mark the pulse of that awareness of
life whose keenness is the dominant trait of these
protagonists.
'What one feels has become for Clarissa the only
thing that matters. And it is precisely the loss of the
power to feel that terrifies Septimus Smith and leads him
finally to suicide. By throwing away his life, now become
meaningless, he consummates the symbolic sacrifice made
by Clarissa when she threw a coin into the Serpentine.
Clarissa, Peter Walsh and Septimus Smith are involved in
the pursuit of reality behind appearances. Clarissa, by
marrying Richard, had condemned herself to a compromise.
Peter, the solitary traveller, half-way between Clarissas
surrender and the intransigence of Septimus, is doomed to
social failure. And Septimus, guilty of the unpardonable
crime of latching meaning to words of a symbolical kind
is literally cast out by society. Thus, the social
criticism is grafted on to the psycho-metaphysical theme
of the novel. Politics, money, religious intolerance,
everything in our civilisation which is built on ready-made
ideas into which feeling does not infuse significance,
creates around human beings a prison parallel to that in
which our own nature confines us, so much so that to
Septimus visionary mind it becomes its concrete
embodiment.
The themes of loneliness, of the impossibility of knowing
other people, of the futility, renunciation inherent in
existence recur constantly. Nevertheless the burden they
lay on human beings is lightened at certain privileged
moments filled solely with the miracle of life. These
perfect moments of vision, as Virginia Woolf called them,
change life into an exciting adventure where poetry is
overwhelming. They make us cling to life in spite of all
its bitterness. And certain people carry with them a sort
of power that renders them sensitive to the beauty of
life and at the same time makes them mediums through whom
other people are sensitised in their turn. clarissa is
one of these people. Her power is nameless as it is
indefinable and can be summed up in a single word: being.
The final sentence of the novel 'For there she was
does not only assert Clarissas material presence,
it sums up her very presentness.
There is another resource open to individuals, even to
those most utterly despised and rejected by existence,
the Rezias or the old woman singing by the underground
station, one ultimate weapon against despair and defeat,
memory. The aura of happiness which, throughout the book
surrounds the manifold returns to the past counteracts
the pessimism that pervades the present. But both, memory
and those intense moments of vision are but partial
victories over death. Sally Seton compares life to a
prison cell on whose walls one scratches in vain, and the
vision of life portrayed by Virginia Woolf in this novel
is of extreme cruelty as it is shown in the images and
vocabulary that permeates the novel with singular
precision and poignancy. The recourse to past happiness
through memory or to that unfailing sensitivity which is
summed up in moments of intensity or keenness of
existence, is intermittent and personal. The obscure and
hostile forces of society and life remain intact.
Septimus is just a madman. Clarissa is a society woman.
They are heroes on a weak scale.
Nevertheless, the figure of Clarissa Dalloway dominates
the novel. In fact, Virginia Woolf has tried to open a
new path and build a character along new lines. If she is
the centre of the picture, all the other characters, even
the flattest ones like Mr Dalloway, converge towards her,
to mingle and blend with her substance. This blurring of
outlines and this fusion of beings reveal an order of
reality entirely different from that which the term
character, personality, hero, normally imply. What we
have here is no longer somebody or something, it is not
an object or a person which though more or less complex
is nevertheless determined, difficult as it may be to
trace his outline; what we have is a nexus of relation, a
manifold participation in all that lies around absorbing
ít all into his own substance, which is constantly
altered by this contact. It no longer is; it becomes. She
has done away with the life-like bias of realism. 'These
are characters, she says, without any
features at all. We go down into them as we descend
into some enormous cavern. With these figures whose
realism has dissolved away, Virginia Woolf can
henceforward take liberties, bending them to her
intentions, giving them the form which will hold the
content she seeks to put into her work, and the
transparency which will reveal the essence she wishes to
communicate.
And what she wishes to communicate is that vision of the
universe which each one of us has, and which is made up
of the relations which the I, that central
enigma where everything happens and from which everything
emanates, maintains with what lies around it: individuals,
society, events, nature. From the traditional point of
view, at least from that of those she called materialists,
all these elements, circumscribed in their definition,
solid with conviction, can be juxtaposed and set out like
so many objects. But for Virginia Woolfl reality, life,
arent like that: they form a luminous halo,
condense around our impressions, and they can only be
expressed by means of these sensations. And it is only
because human beings are the seat ot these that they
remain the medium to which the novelist must have
recourse.
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