home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- To The Lighthouse
-
-
- (MAY 30, 1927)
-
- To The Lighthouse--Virginia Woolf, is divided into three
- parts. the first, situated like the other two in the Hebrides
- home of English family Ramsay, includes the hours of a summer
- day from mid-afternoon to bedtime. In it is regarded with an
- astute and penetrating scrutiny the character of Mrs. Ramsay as
- reflected in her children, guests, husband.
-
- In the last glimpse, ten years later, with Mrs. Ramsay and
- two of her children dead, the others undertake a last visit to
- the lighthouse. Like the music of a fugue, this movement touches
- the themes of the first, catches them in new cadences and
- changed echoes. The group of people for whom Mrs. Ramsay had
- been the axis, whirl and drift like the specks of a nebula. In
- a curious key, full of sharps, Author Woolf produces the effect
- of an enormous change in life where little change is apparent.
-
- The significance of Author Woolf's last novel, Mrs. Dalloway,
- was that her "stream of consciousness" method was not only
- startlingly original but startlingly successful as well. Mrs.
- Dalloway observed the classic unities of drama, concentrating
- on one woman, one day in her life. In To the Lighthouse the
- stream-of-consciousness technique is present as before but its
- presence is subtler, more diffused. The author's scrutiny falls,
- not on one but on many personalities. Now, in her brilliant
- offensive on the human soul, she does not perpetrate on open
- advance. Weaving, stalking, spying from thickets, she discovers
- the nature of her prey. The actual capture she leaves to those
- who, reading her book, are her companions in the chase.
-
-