Virginia Woolf Love Quotes
Collection of top 48 famous quotes about Virginia Woolf Love
Virginia Woolf Love Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Virginia Woolf Love quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Peace was the third emotion. Love. Hate. Peace. Three emotions made the ply of human life.
— Virginia Woolf
They became part of that unreal but penetrating and exciting universe which is the world seen through the eyes of love
— Virginia Woolf
To put it in a nutshell, he was afflicted with a love of literature. It was the fatal nature of this disease to substitute a phantom for reality.
— Virginia Woolf
That people should love like this, that Mr. Bankes should feel this for Mrs. Ramsay (she glanced at him musing) was helpful, was exalting.
— Virginia Woolf
First she starved herself of love, which meant also life; then of poetry in deference to what she thought her religion demanded.
— Virginia Woolf
Deffand fell in love with him, and thought that at her age she could
— Virginia Woolf
Love and religion! thought Clarissa, going back into the drawing room, tingling all over. How detestable, how detestable they are!
— Virginia Woolf
Clumsiness is often mated with a love of solitude.
— Virginia Woolf
Anyhow, she thought, they are aware of each other; they live in each other; what else is love, she asked, listening to their laughter.
— Virginia Woolf
On their faces an expression like the letters of a legend, written around the base of a statue praising duty, gratitude, fidelity, love of England ...
— Virginia Woolf
Love. Hate. Peace. Three emotion made the ply of human life.
— Virginia Woolf
To love makes one solitary, she thought. She could tell nobody, not even Septimus now ...
— Virginia Woolf
I am all the time thinking about poetry and fiction and you.
— Virginia Woolf
I like it when people actually come, but I love it when they go.
— Virginia Woolf
But with you I am deeply passionately, unrequitedly in love.
— Virginia Woolf
Love had meant nothing to him but sawdust and cinders.
— Virginia Woolf
What art was there, known to love or cunning, by which one pressed through into those secret chambers?
— Virginia Woolf
I love and I hate. I desire one thing only.
— Virginia Woolf
But our hatred is almost indistinguishable from our love.
— Virginia Woolf
One must love everything.
— Virginia Woolf
If this is love, there is something highly ridiculous about it.
— Virginia Woolf
How are we to account for the strange human craving for the pleasure of feeling afraid which is so much involved in our love of ghost stories?
— Virginia Woolf
One does not love a place the less because one has suffered in it.
— Virginia Woolf
Life and a lover
— Virginia Woolf
He is precisely the young man to fall headlong in love and repent it for the rest of his life.
— Virginia Woolf
To love makes one solitary.
— Virginia Woolf
I love tremendous and sonorous words.
— Virginia Woolf
For I am more selves than Neville thinks. We are not as simple as our friends would have us to meet our needs. Yet love is simple.
— Virginia Woolf
Oh, I am in love with life!
— Virginia Woolf
Writing is like sex. First you do it for love, then you do it for your friends, and then you do it for money.
— Virginia Woolf
What does the brain matter compared with the heart?
— Virginia Woolf
Love had a thousand shapes.
— Virginia Woolf
She put on her lace collar. She put on her new hat and he never noticed; and he was happy without her.
— Virginia Woolf
Septimus has been working too hard - that was all she could say to her own mother. To love makes one solitary, she thought.
— Virginia Woolf
For such gestures one falls hopelessly in love for a lifetime
— Virginia Woolf
There was something solemn in it- but love and religion would destroy that, whatever it was, the privacy of the soul.
— Virginia Woolf
Love, the poet said, is woman's whole existence.
— 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
Romantic Love is only an Illusion. A story one makes up in One's Mind about Another Person.
— Virginia Woolf