Woolf
Here is one of the reasons I like Woolf so much. For her depiction of reality, especially because it is a reality so dear to me:
"Next day the light of the October morning was falling in dusty
shafts through the uncurtained windows, and the hum of traffic rose
from the street. London then was winding itself up again; the factory
was astir; the machines were beginning. It was tempting, after all this
reading, to look out of the window and see what London was doing on the
morning of the 26th of October 1928. And what was London doing? Nobody,
it seemed, was reading Antony and Cleopatra. London was wholly
indifferent, it appeared, to Shakespeare's plays. Nobody cared a
straw--and I do not blame them--for the future of fiction, the death of
poetry or the development by the average woman of a prose style
completely expressive of her mind. If opinions upon any of these
matters had been chalked on the pavement, nobody would have stooped to
read them. The nonchalance of the hurrying feet would have rubbed them
out in half an hour. Here came an errand-boy; here a woman with a dog
on a lead. The fascination of the London street is that no two people
are ever alike; each seems bound on some private affair of his own.
There were the business-like, with their little bags; there were the
drifters rattling sticks upon area railings; there were affable
characters to whom the streets serve for clubroom, hailing men in carts
and giving information without being asked for it. Also there were
funerals to which men, thus suddenly reminded of the passing of their
own bodies, lifted their hats. And then a very distinguished gentleman
came slowly down a doorstep and paused to avoid collision with a
bustling lady who had, by some means or other, acquired a splendid fur
coat and a bunch of Parma violets. They all seemed separate,
self-absorbed, on business of their own." (A Room of One's Own, beginning of chapter 6)
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