set gDates = [[], [0, "The Times, May 21, 1925", 0, "The Times Literary Supplement, Oct 8, 1931", 0, "The Times Literary Supplement, March 13, 1937"]]
set gName = getat(["Woolf"],1)
@[]#A NOVEL EXPERIMENT##POETIC TRANSPARENCY##TIME IS THE HERO
"Women have served all these centuries as looking-glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of a man at twice its natural size," said Virginia Woolf#Woolf was a central figure in the Bloomsbury circle of writers, thinkers and painters, who all lived within a few streets of each other near the British Museum, London#The novel Flush is one of Woolf's stranger experiments: it recounts the lives of Elizabeth Barrett Browning and her husband, the poet Robert Browning, from the point of view of Elizabeth's dog, Flush#In Orlando (1928) the title "character" appears in various historical and modern situations, taking on different personages - and different sexes - as the centuries pass by. It has been interpreted as a lesbian or feminist text, and a testament to the endurance of human values. #Virginia Woolf described fiction as being "like a spider's web, attached ever so slightly, perhaps, but still attached to life at all four corners"#Why, throughout history, Woolf wrote in 1929, "did men drink wine and women water? Why was one sex so prosperous and the other so poor?" (A Room of One's Own)