In Andelys Wood’s “Walking the Web in the Lost London of
Mrs. Dalloway,” the author discusses the time distortion that is associated
with Clarissa, Peter, and Septimus’ walks in London, and how they amount of
distance covered is not possible in the time allotted by Woolf (Wood). She
cites this quote form Woolf’s Orlando:
An hour, once it lodges in the
queer element of the human spirit, may be stretched to fifty or a hundred times
its clock length; on the other hand, an hour may be accurately represented on
the timepiece of the mind by one second. This extraordinary discrepancy between
time on the clock and time in the mind is less known than it should be and
deserves fuller investigation. (61)
and goes on to say “Woolf had already started that
investigation in Mrs. Dalloway” (Wood).
The relationship between timepiece and the mind is not one-to-one, but
there are some important timepiece times noted in Mrs. Dalloway.
In reading Wood’s piece, I was reminded that time is an
arbitrary, man-made concept. The timepiece, clock, or watch could be argued to
be man’s attempt to control time. But in Mrs.
Dalloway, we are also reminded that nature will follow its own time
schedule.
When Clarissa is in the florist shop -- named Mulberry’s,
which Wood points out is an “apparently invented name” – she is reminded of her
youth in the country and the flowers associated with it. Clarissa remembers the
evening primrose. This flower opens its bloom in approximately one minute,
which can create a sort of time distortion for the watcher. (It is also known
as a “colonizer,” which speaks to other themes in the novel.)
During this reflection, Clarissa is also thinking of the “moment
between six and seven when every flower--roses, carnations, irises,
lilac--glows; white, violet, red, deep orange; every flower seems to burn by
itself, softly, purely in the misty beds” (Woolf 13). Later in the novel, the
reader finds out that Septimus commits suicide at approximately six in the
evening, and the reader might be reminded of the flowers that glowed, and the
way their colors represent death and
violence (red, deep orange) and the loss of innocence (white, violet).
Connecting Septimus’ suicide with the horrors he experienced in World War I,
these flowers and colors attached to a certain time in the evening presents a
foreshadowing of his death.
The fact that Peter hears the ambulance on its way to recover
Septimus’ body and he thinks of it as a “triumph of civilization” (Woolf 147),
may also lead the reader to think of what else is a “triumph of civilization.”
Since Septimus’ identity throughout this novel is connected to World War I, we
might think of war as, if not a triumph, at least a consequence of
civilization. Following this train of thought, another important time in the
novel is 11:00 am. This is when Peter and Clarissa reunite, argue, and seem to
settle things in the drawing room. As their relationship was often tumultuous,
it could be compared to a war. Knowing that at the same time – 11:00 am – World
War I was officially declared on July 18, 1914, and officially ended on
November 11, 1918, the reader can see a parallel drawn between Peter and
Clarissa’s relationship and the Great War that Woolf so often included in her
writing.
560 words... barely enough..seems rather minimalist.
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