Chapter 6
Virginia Woolf
Woolf captures the duality of beauty, threading together laughter and anguish into a single, cutting experience. Life in 1929 teetered on the brink of change, standing between the scars of the Great War and the looming threat of another. This duality was emblematic of a world both recovering and bracing itself—a reminder that beauty is fleeting and deeply intertwined with the world's impermanence. Woolf's London, with its bustling streets and indifferent passersby, becomes a backdrop to this realization.