How could one leap on the back of life and wring its scruff?
– Virginia Woolf
Related Quotes:
- …when someone is honest and vulnerable, they wring my heart – I want to hug them for being real… – John Geddes
- Abruptly, Adrik snarled, ‘I’m glad Sergei’s dead. I’m just sorry I didn’t get to wring his neck myself.”You’d need two hands for that,’ said – Leigh Bardugo
- Get ready to leap into the life of your dreams! – Virginia Toole
- Do you know I get such a passion for reading sometimes its like the other passion -writing- only the wrong side of the carpet. – Virginia Woolf
- Up goes the rocket. Its golden grain falls, fertilising, upon the rich soil of my imagination. – Virginia Woolf
- I begin to be impatient of solitude – to feel its draperies hang sweltering, unwholesome about me. – Virginia Woolf
- Fiction is like a spider’s web, attached ever so lightly perhaps, but still attached to life at all four corners. – Virginia Woolf
- Among the tortures and devastations of life is this then-”our friends are not able to finish their stories. – Virginia Woolf
- The immense success of our life, is I think, that our treasure is hid away; or rather in such common things that nothing can touch it. – Virginia Woolf
- A feminist is any woman who tells the truth about her life. – Virginia Woolf
- With twice his wits, she had to see things through his eyes — one of the tragedies of married life. – Virginia Woolf
- Millions of things came back to her. Atoms danced apart and massed themselves. But how did they compose what people called a life? – Virginia Woolf
- If life has a base that it stands upon, if it is a bowl that one fills and fills and fills – than my bowl without a doubt stands upon this memory. – Virginia Woolf
- When life sank down for a moment, the range of experience seemed limitless. – Virginia Woolf
- Let us not take it for granted that life exists more in what is commonly thought big than in what is commonly thought small. – Virginia Woolf
- Sleep, that deplorable curtailment of the joy of life. – Virginia Woolf
- He is precisely the young man to fall headlong in love and repent it for the rest of his life. – Virginia Woolf
- It was awful, he cried, awful, awful!Still, the sun was hot. Still, one got over things. Still, life had a way of adding day to day. – Virginia Woolf
- One does not like to be told that one is naturally the inferior of a little man – Virginia Woolf
- Literature is impoverished beyond our counting by the doors that have been shut upon women – Virginia Woolf
- In the flailing light they all looked sharp-edged and ethereal and divided by great distances – Virginia Woolf
- We scarcely want to analyse what we feel to be so large and deeply human. – Virginia Woolf
- What I value is the naked contact of a mind. – Virginia Woolf
- It is far harder to kill a phantom than a reality. – Virginia Woolf
- …it struck her, this was tragedy– not palls, dust, and the shroud; but children coerced, their spirits subdued. – Virginia Woolf
- If you drink the good wine of the noble countess, you have to entertain her less desirable friends. – Virginia Woolf
- Well, we must wait for the future to show. – Virginia Woolf
- Are we not acceptable, moon? Are we not lovely sitting together here, I in my satin; he in black and white? – Virginia Woolf
- And the poem, I think, is only your voice speaking. – Virginia Woolf
- I begin to long for some little language such as lovers use, broken words, inarticulate words, like the shuffling of feet on pavement. – Virginia Woolf
- Whatever may be their use in civilized societies, mirrors are essential to all violent and heroic action. – Virginia Woolf
- She came from the most worthless of classes – the rich, with a smattering of culture. – Virginia Woolf
- Children, our lives have been gongs striking; clamour and boasting; cries of despair; blows on the nape of the neck in gardens. – Virginia Woolf
- Milly Brush once might almost have fallen in love with these silences. – Virginia Woolf
- Kind old ladies assure us that cats are often the best judges of character. A cat will always go to a good man, they say[.] – Virginia Woolf
- The real novelist, the perfectly simple human being, could go on, indefinitely imaging. – Virginia Woolf
- Here was one room; there another. Did religion solve that, or love? – Virginia Woolf
- When I am grown up I shall carry a notebook-”a fat book with many pages, methodically lettered. I shall enter my phrases. – Virginia Woolf
- so that it may grow fatter and – Virginia Woolf
- No need to hurry. No need to sparkle. No need to be anybody but oneself. – Virginia Woolf