excerpt from 'The diary of Virginia Woolf. Vol.3, 1925-30' pp. 139 (113 words)

excerpt from 'The diary of Virginia Woolf. Vol.3, 1925-30' pp. 139 (113 words)

part of

The diary of Virginia Woolf. Vol.3, 1925-30

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

139

type

text excerpt

encoded value

Now the moths will I think fill out the skeleton which I dashed in here: the play-poem idea: the idea of some continuous stream, not solely of human thought, but of the ship, the night &c, all flowing together: intersected by the arrival of the bright moths.  A man & a woman are to be sitting at table talking.  Or shall they remain silent? It is to be a love story: she is finally to let the great moth in...But it needs ripening.  I do a little work on it in the evening when the gramophone is playing late Beethoven sonatas. (The windows fidget at their fastenings as if we were at sea).

 

appears in search results as

excerpt from 'The diary of Virginia Woolf. Vol.3, 1925-30' pp. 139 (113 words)

1444741070173:

reported in source

1444741070173

documented in
Page data computed in 332 ms with 1,746,672 bytes allocated and 35 SPARQL queries executed.