[Vwoolf] curiouser and curiouser: the desk(s) of VW

Mark Hussey mhussey at verizon.net
Sat Aug 29 17:06:27 EDT 2015


Perhaps we need to institute a fact checking website to counter the endless flow of misinformation coming from novelists and tv series writers, film-makers and others who prefer fictional versions of VW et al. to anything based on the historical record!

 

From: Vwoolf [mailto:vwoolf-bounces+mhussey=verizon.net at lists.osu.edu] On Behalf Of Leslie Hankins
Sent: Saturday, August 29, 2015 4:57 PM
To: vwoolf at lists.service.ohio-state.edu; International Virginia Woolf Society
Subject: [Vwoolf] curiouser and curiouser: the desk(s) of VW

 

Hello again!  The desk plot thickens.  A colleague at dinner (not a VW scholar) told me she had read somewhere that VW was really very predatory and rude about asking for and demanding a desk from a friend, a desk that was an heirloom, etc.  She said that Vanessa had been horribly embarrassed by the whole thing, etc, etc.  

 

I felt at a loss because it didn't sound familiar, at least not the outrage of it all.

 

Finally she tracked it down to the novel Vanessa & Her Sister by Parmar.  

 

The passage in the novel (set up as a journal entry) is rather harsh:

 

Saturday 5 May 1906--46 Gordon Square (end of a long day)

 

"Virginia asked Violet for a table.  Such an innocuous sentence, but what a rumpus it has caused.  It is apparently a particular favourite of Violet's and a valuable antique to boot.  Virginia just thundered in to tea at Violet's one afternoon and told her that she would quite like to have it.  Mother would be so distressed.  Thoby and Adrian are appalled--"One simply does not go about asking for other people's things, Ginia!"--and I am now resigned.  I was unsettled at first, wary as I am for any signs of imbalance or incongruity in Virginia, but seeing that it was just one of her peculiar moments of directness at work, I relaxed.  Violet was an utter dear and had the table delivered the next day.  Virginia is planning to have two of the legs sawn off, which makes the gift quite irreversible.




      And--Virginia, after listening to a stinging lecture from Thobs, has written twice today, pestering poor Violet for the price of the table."  (87)

 

I've looked at VW's letters to Violet (Vol 1 270, [May 1906] p 225ff  but haven't found anything about Vanessa's reaction.  Does anyone have any more information about this?  I've hardly looked at Patmar's book but my colleague noted that it made VW out to be rather demonic.

 

I'll keep looking but it does seem curious.

 

leslie

-- 

Leslie Kathleen Hankins

Professor

Department of English & Creative Writing

 

"Moreover, however interesting facts may be, they are an inferior form of fiction, & gradually we become impatient of their weakness & diffuseness, of their compromises & evasions, of the slovenly sentences which they make for themselves, and are eager to revive ourselves with the greater intensity & truth of fiction."  

                                                         Virginia Woolf, "How Should One Read a Book?"

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