novella
Active Member
Hey, Novella. Just wanted to say "hey".
Aside: (How's it hangin', smirk?)
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Hey, Novella. Just wanted to say "hey".
First, Ramsey is not a ‘warts and all kind of guy.’ He’s the hero of the story.
Haven’t you read the whole book?
He walks like a god among everyone at the house, and they all project their insecurities and desires onto him. Each other character measures him or herself against Mr. Ramsey and what they imagine his life to be. He is the only self-contained character in the book, the only person who is not constantly changed by the moods of those around him. On the other hand, everyone else in the book, by turns, abhors and then adores him.
. . .his own children, who sprung from his loins, should be aware from childhood that life is difficult; facts uncrmopomising;and the passage to that fabled land where our brightest hopes are exinguished, our frail barks founder in darkness...
He’s the Sun in their universe. Contrary to raising his children with 'true grit and disappointment' he sets the world right, with measured fatherly gestures.
Similarly, there is no ‘conflict’ between Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey.
Who, in the cast of characters, is truly superficial and venal, socially porous, and full of clouded judgments, and who is true to him or her self?
How aimless it was, how chaotic, how unreal it was, she thought, looking at her empty coffee cup. Mrs. Ramsey dead;Andrew killed; Pruse dead too-repeatit as she might, it roused no feeling in her.
The great revelation had never come. The grat revelation perhaps never did come. Instead there were little daily miracles, illuminations, matches struck unexpectedly in the dark; here was one. This, that, and the other; herself and charles Tansley and the breaking wave; Mrs. Ramsay bringing them together; Mrs. Ramsey saying "Life standing still here"; Mrs. Ramsay making of the moment somthing permanent. . .this was of the nature of a revelation. In the midst of chaos there was shape;: this eternal passing and flowing.
No, actually, I wasn't which is very clear in the post (and why you've taken it out of context). It refers very specifically to that relationship.
A close reading of the text shows no constant conflict at all. She is, as I said before, alternately adoring and resentful, as is the case with most close relationships when looked at through the moment-to-moment inner voices of any individual.
So you're intimidated and impressed by anyone who goes to Harvard? Ha.
That Sparknote was written by a couple of wankers--David Hopson and Brian Phillips-- in the offices of Spark Publishing in NY. They write sparknotes for a living. Oooo, I'm really impressed. I was doing such work twenty years ago.
No, I never wrote sparknotes. I was a staff writer in NYC for quite a while. If the 'beast' that you refer to is the reader, then I guess I did and do feed the beast.
Nothing wrong with that. Nothing magical either.
I find your blind faith in sparknotes really funny.
Aside: (How's it hangin', smirk?)
While I won't be getting to it right away I would like to give To the Lighthouse a second try because I know I missed many, many details/observations.