21 pages • 42 minutes read
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The narrator—more or less Virginia Woolf herself—is imaginative, sensitive, and unconventional. She is fascinated by what most people would overlook or deem unworthy of such close attention, seeing value in even the day moth, a creature that, by her own admission, is unimpressive. She compares it to the night moth and the bounty of nature through her window, and finds it wanting—but cannot stop looking at it. She describes the day moth as a lesser moth and seeks to find a more proper classification for the creature, as if she wants it to belong more harmoniously within the natural order. At the beginning of the essay, the narrator employs a detached, scientific tone, but later invests the moth with pathos, or a sense of tragic emotion. Her interest is no longer scientific, but instead grounded in the creature’s symbolic nature, in the idea of mortality as a whole.
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By Virginia Woolf