To the Lighthouse
Virginia Woolf
Woolf's era was steeped in the search for grand truths, influenced by the sweeping certitudes of Victorian certainty and scientific progress. Yet here she gently dismisses the notion that life's meaning resides in some ultimate, waiting revelation. Instead, she finds profundity in the mundane, transformative moments that illuminate our days. Woolf offers a quiet rebellion against the pursuit of grand epiphanies, suggesting that true understanding is a mosaic of smaller, fleeting insights.