[The Voyage Out by Virginia Woolf]@TWC D-Link bookThe Voyage Out CHAPTER XXIV 3/25
It had looked so bare and so bright and formal on that night when they came into it out of the darkness; it had been filled, too, with little red, excited faces, always moving, and people so brightly dressed and so animated that they did not seem in the least like real people, nor did you feel that you could talk to them.
And now the room was dim and quiet, and beautiful silent people passed through it, to whom you could go and say anything you liked.
She felt herself amazingly secure as she sat in her arm-chair, and able to review not only the night of the dance, but the entire past, tenderly and humorously, as if she had been turning in a fog for a long time, and could now see exactly where she had turned.
For the methods by which she had reached her present position, seemed to her very strange, and the strangest thing about them was that she had not known where they were leading her.
That was the strange thing, that one did not know where one was going, or what one wanted, and followed blindly, suffering so much in secret, always unprepared and amazed and knowing nothing; but one thing led to another and by degrees something had formed itself out of nothing, and so one reached at last this calm, this quiet, this certainty, and it was this process that people called living.
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