The Works of Virginia Woolf

Works of Virginia Woolf

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List of Works by Genre and Title
List of Works in Alphabetical Order
List of Works in Chronological Order
Virginia Woolf Biography
About and Navigation

List of Works by Genre and Title

Novels :: Essays :: Short Stories

Novels:
Between the Acts
Flush: A Biography
Jacob's Room
Mrs. Dalloway
Night and Day
Orlando: A Biography
To the Lighthouse
The Voyage Out
The Waves
The Years

Essays:
The Common Reader: First Series
The Common Reader: Second Series
A Room of One's Own
Three Guineas

Short stories:
Monday or Tuesday:
A Haunted House
A Society
Monday or Tuesday
An Unwritten Novel
The String Quartet
Blue & Green
Kew Gardens
The Mark on the Wall
Short Stories:
Solid Objects
In the Orchard
Mrs Dalloway in Bond Street
A Woman's College from Outside
The New Dress
Moments of Being
"Slater's Pins Have No Points"
The Lady in the Looking-Glass
A Reflection
The Shooting Party
The Duchess and the Jeweller
Lappin and Lappinova
The Man Who Loved His Kind
The Searchlight
The Legacy
Together and Apart
A Summing Up

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A-Z Index

_B_ | _C_ | _D_ | _F_ | _H_ | _I_ | _J_ | _K_ | _L_ | _M_ | _N_ | _O_ | _R_ | _S_ | _T_ | _U_ | _V_ | _W_ | _Y_

Between the Acts
Blue & Green
Common Reader: First Series
Common Reader: Second Series
Duchess and the Jeweller
Flush
Haunted House
In the Orchard
Jack Mytton
Jacob's Room
Kew Gardens
Lady in the Looking-Glass
Lappin and Lappinova
Legacy
Man Who Loved His Kind
Mark on the Wall
Moments of Being
Monday or Tuesday
Mrs. Dalloway
Mrs Dalloway in Bond Street
New Dress
Night and Day
Orlando
Room of One's Own
Shooting Party
Short Stories
Slater's Pins Have No Points
Society
Solid Objects
String Quartet
Summing Up
Three Guineas
To the Lighthouse
Together and Apart
Unwritten Novel
Voyage Out
Waves
Woman's College from Outside
Years

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Go to Start

Between the Acts

by Virginia Woolf

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Virginia Woolf Biography

It was a summer's night and they were talking, in the big room with the windows open to the garden, about the cesspool. The county council had promised to bring water to the village, but they hadn't.

Mrs. Haines, the wife of the gentleman farmer, a goosefaced woman with eyes protruding as if they saw something to gobble in the gutter, said affectedly: "What a subject to talk about on a night like this!"

Then there was silence; and a cow coughed; and that led her to say how odd it was, as a child, she had never feared cows, only horses. But, then, as a small child in a perambulator, a great cart-horse had brushed within an inch of her face. Her family, she told the old man in the arm-chair, had lived near Liskeard for many centuries. There were the graves in the churchyard to prove it.

A bird chuckled outside. "A nightingale?" asked Mrs. Haines. No, nightingales didn't come so far north. It was a daylight bird, chuckling over the substance and succulence of the day, over worms, snails, grit, even in sleep.

The old man in the arm-chair--Mr. Oliver, of the Indian Civil Service, retired--said that the site they had chosen for the cesspool was, if he had heard aright, on the Roman road. From an aeroplane, he said, you could still see, plainly marked, the scars made by the Britons; by the Romans; by the Elizabethan manor house; and by the plough, when they ploughed the hill to grow wheat in the Napoleonic wars.

"But you don't remember . . ." Mrs. Haines began. No, not that. Still he did remember--and he was about to tell them what, when there was a sound outside, and Isa, his son's wife, came in with her hair in pigtails; she was wearing a dressing-gown with faded peacocks on it. She came in like a swan swimming its way; then was checked and stopped; was surprised to find people there; and lights burning. She had been sitting with her little boy who wasn't well, she apologized. What had they been saying?

"Discussing the cesspool," said Mr. Oliver.

"What a subject to talk about on a night like this!" Mrs. Haines exclaimed again.

What had he said about the cesspool; or indeed about anything? Isa wondered, inclining her head towards the gentleman farmer, Rupert Haines. She had met him at a Bazaar; and at a tennis party. He had handed her a cup and a racquet--that was all. But in his ravaged face she always felt mystery; and in his silence, passion. At the tennis party she had felt this, and at the Bazaar. Now a third time, if anything more strongly, she felt it again.

"I remember," the old man interrupted, "my mother. .