Mrs. Dalloway Virginia Woolf (guided reading books .TXT) đ
- Author: Virginia Woolf
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Sally, to do her justice, saw through all that. One of the things he remembered best was an argument one Sunday morning at Bourton about womenâs rights (that antediluvian topic), when Sally suddenly lost her temper, flared up, and told Hugh that he represented all that was most detestable in British middle-class life. She told him that she considered him responsible for the state of âthose poor girls in Piccadillyââ âHugh, the perfect gentleman, poor Hugh!â ânever did a man look more horrified! She did it on purpose she said afterwards (for they used to get together in the vegetable garden and compare notes). âHeâs read nothing, thought nothing, felt nothing,â he could hear her saying in that very emphatic voice which carried so much farther than she knew. The stable boys had more life in them than Hugh, she said. He was a perfect specimen of the public school type, she said. No country but England could have produced him. She was really spiteful, for some reason; had some grudge against him. Something had happenedâ âhe forgot whatâ âin the smoking-room. He had insulted herâ âkissed her? Incredible! Nobody believed a word against Hugh of course. Who could? Kissing Sally in the smoking-room! If it had been some Honourable Edith or Lady Violet, perhaps; but not that ragamuffin Sally without a penny to her name, and a father or a mother gambling at Monte Carlo. For of all the people he had ever met Hugh was the greatest snobâ âthe most obsequiousâ âno, he didnât cringe exactly. He was too much of a prig for that. A first-rate valet was the obvious comparisonâ âsomebody who walked behind carrying suitcases; could be trusted to send telegramsâ âindispensable to hostesses. And heâd found his jobâ âmarried his Honourable Evelyn; got some little post at Court, looked after the Kingâs cellars, polished the Imperial shoe-buckles, went about in knee-breeches and lace ruffles. How remorseless life is! A little job at Court!
He had married this lady, the Honourable Evelyn, and they lived hereabouts, so he thought (looking at the pompous houses overlooking the Park), for he had lunched there once in a house which had, like all Hughâs possessions, something that no other house could possibly haveâ âlinen cupboards it might have been. You had to go and look at themâ âyou had to spend a great deal of time always admiring whatever it wasâ âlinen cupboards, pillowcases, old oak furniture, pictures, which Hugh had picked up for an old song. But Mrs. Hugh sometimes gave the show away. She was one of those obscure mouse-like little women who admire big men. She was almost negligible. Then suddenly she would say something quite unexpectedâ âsomething sharp. She had the relics of the grand manner perhaps. The steam coal was a little too strong for herâ âit made the atmosphere thick. And so there they lived, with their linen cupboards and their old masters and their pillowcases fringed with real lace at the rate of five or ten thousand a year presumably, while he, who was two years older than Hugh, cadged for a job.
At fifty-three he had to come and ask them to put him into some secretaryâs office, to find him some usherâs job teaching little boys Latin, at the beck and call of some mandarin in an office, something that brought in five hundred a year; for if he married Daisy, even with his pension, they could never do on less. Whitbread could do it presumably; or Dalloway. He didnât mind what he asked Dalloway. He was a thorough good sort; a bit limited; a bit thick in the head; yes; but a thorough good sort. Whatever he took up he did in the same matter-of-fact sensible way; without a touch of imagination, without a spark of brilliancy, but with the inexplicable niceness of his type. He ought to have been a country gentlemanâ âhe was wasted on politics. He was at his best out of doors, with horses and dogsâ âhow good he was, for instance, when that great shaggy dog of Clarissaâs got caught in a trap and had its paw half torn off, and Clarissa turned faint and Dalloway did the whole thing; bandaged, made splints; told Clarissa not to be a fool. That was what she liked him for perhapsâ âthat was what she needed. âNow, my dear, donât be a fool. Hold thisâ âfetch that,â all the time talking to the dog as if it were a human being.
But how could she swallow all that stuff about poetry? How could she let him hold forth about Shakespeare? Seriously and solemnly Richard Dalloway got on his hind legs and said that no decent man ought to read Shakespeareâs sonnets because it was like listening at keyholes (besides the relationship was not one that he approved). No decent man ought to let his wife visit a deceased wifeâs sister. Incredible! The only thing to do was to pelt him with sugared almondsâ âit was at dinner. But Clarissa sucked it all in; thought it so honest of him; so independent of him; Heaven knows if she didnât think him the most original mind sheâd ever met!
That was one of the bonds between Sally and himself. There was a garden where they used to walk, a walled-in place, with rosebushes and giant cauliflowersâ âhe could remember Sally tearing off a rose, stopping to exclaim at the beauty of the cabbage leaves in the moonlight (it was extraordinary how vividly it all came back to him, things he hadnât thought of for years), while she implored him, half laughing of course, to carry off Clarissa, to save her from the Hughs and the Dalloways and all the other âperfect gentlemenâ who would âstifle her
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