Mrs Dalloway (Part I), by Virginia Woolf (1882-1941).
Difficulty: Medium    Uploaded: 1 month, 1 week ago by soybeba     Last Activity: 18 minutes ago
18% Upvoted
4% Translated but not Upvoted
138 Units
22% Translated
18% Upvoted
Parte I. La Sra. Dalloway dijo que compraría las flores ella misma.
Porque Lucy tenía su trabajo preparado para ella. Las puertas serían arrancadas de sus bisagras; los hombres de Rumpelmayer venían. Y entonces, pensó Clarissa Dalloway, qué mañana... fresca como si se la hubieran regalado a los niños en la playa.
¡Qué algarabía! ¡Qué zambullida! Pues así le había parecido siempre, cuando, con un pequeño chirrido de las bisagras, que ahora podía oír, había abierto de golpe las ventanas francesas y se había zambullido en el aire libre en Bourton. Qué fresco, qué tranquilo, más tranquilo que esto, por supuesto, era el aire a primera hora de la mañana; como el batir de una ola; el beso de una ola; frío y cortante y, sin embargo (para una muchacha de dieciocho años como era ella entonces) solemne, sintiendo como sentía, allí de pie junto a la ventana abierta, que algo terrible estaba a punto de suceder; mirando las flores, los árboles con la neblina que se desprendía de ellos y los cuervos que subían y bajaban; de pie y mirando hasta que Peter Walsh dijo: "¿Meditando entre los vegetales?". ... ¿fue eso?... "Prefiero los hombres a las coliflores"... ¿fue eso? Él lo debia haber dicho durante el desayuno una mañana cuando ella había salido a la terraza, Peter Walsh. Volvería de la India uno de estos días, junio o julio, había olvidado cuando, porque sus cartas estaban muy aburridas; lo que se recordaba eran sus palabras; sus ojos, su navaja, su sonrisa, su malhumor y, cuando millones de cosas habían desaparecido por completo (¡qué raro era eso!), unas pocas frases como estas sobre las coles.
Se quedó un poco rígida en la acera, esperando que pasara la furgoneta de Durtnall. Una mujer encantadora, pensaba Scrope Purvis, conociéndola como se conoce a las personas que viven a su lado en Westminster; ella tenía algo como de pájaro, del arrendajo, azul-verde, ligero, vivaz, aunque tenía más de cincuenta años, y había vuelto muy blanca desde su enfermedad. Allí se posaba, sin nunca verlo, esperando a cruzar, muy erguida.
Por haber vivido en Westminster... ¿cuántos años hace ya? más de veinte... incluso en medio del tráfico, o al despertarse por la noche, Clarissa estaba segura, una siente un particular silencio, o solemnidad; una pausa indescriptible; un suspenso (pero eso podría ser su corazón, afectado, decían, por la gripe) antes de que suene el Big Ben. ¡Allí! Fuera hubo un estrépito. Primero una advertencia, musical; luego la hora, definitiva. Los círculos de plomo se disolvieron en el aire. Qué tontos somos, ella pensó, cruzando Victoria Street. Porque solo el cielo sabe por X qué uno lo ama tanto, cómo uno lo ve así, inventándolo, construyéndolo alrededor de uno, dándole vueltas, creándolo cada momento de nuevo; pero las más desaliñadas, las más desdichadas de las miserias sentadas en los umbrales de las puertas ( la bebida su caída) hacen lo mismo; no es posible arreglarlo, estaba segura, con Actos del Parlamento por esa razón: les gusta la vida. En los ojos de la gente, en el moverse, caminar, y andar penosamente; en el rugido y el tumulto; los coches, automóviles, ómnibus, furgonetas, hombres anuncios que revolotean y que se balancean; las bandas de música; los organillos; en el triunfo, el tintineo y el extraño canto alto de algún aeroplano por encima, había lo que ella amaba; la vida; Londres; este momento de junio.
Porque era mediados de junio. La guerra había terminado, excepto por alguien como la Sra. Foxcroft en la embajada anoche consumiéndose porque ese buen chico habia sido asesinado y ahora la vieja mansión sería para un primo; o Lady Bexborough que abrió un bazar, dijeron, con el telegrama en la mano, John, su favorito, asesinado; pero había terminado; gracias a Dios... terminado. Era junio. El rey y la reina estaban en el palacio. Y por todas partes, aunque todavía era muy temprano, se oía un golpeteo, un revuelo de ponis galopando, golpes de bates de cricket; Lores, Ascot, Ranelagh y todos los demás; envueltos en la suave trama del aire azul grisáceo de la mañana, que, a medida que avanzaba el día, los desenvolvía y depositaba en sus canchas y lanzaba a los inquietos ponis, cuyas patas delanteras apenas tocaban el suelo y saltaban, a los jóvenes arremolinados y a las muchachas risueñas con sus muselinas transparentes que, incluso ahora, después de bailar toda la noche, sacaban a correr a sus absurdos perros lanudos; e incluso ahora, a esta hora, discretas viejas viudas salían disparadas en sus coches a hacer recados misteriosos; y los comerciantes se afanaban en sus escaparates con sus imitaciones y diamantes, sus preciosos broches antiguos de color verde mar en engastes del siglo XVIII para tentar a los norteamericanos (pero hay que economizar, no comprar cosas precipitadamente para Elizabeth), y ella también, amándolo como lo amaba con una pasión absurda y fiel, formando parte de ello, puesto que su pueblo fue cortesano una vez en tiempos de los Georges, ella también iba esa misma noche a encender e iluminar; a dar su fiesta. Pore qué raro, entrando en el Parque, el silencio; la neblina; el zumbido; los patos felices nadando lentamente; las aves con bolsas en el pecho caminando con paso torpe; Y quién está llegando , la espalda con la espalda contra los edificios del Gobierno, el más adecuado para llevar un maletín con el escudo real estampado no podía ser otro que Hugh Whitbread; su viejo amigo Hugh, el admirable Hugh.
''Buenos días, Clarissa'' dijo Hugh, bastante extravagant, porque se conocían desde niños. "Where are you off to?"
"I love walking in London," said Mrs. Dalloway. "Really it's better than walking in the country."
They had just come up--unfortunately--to see doctors. Other people came to see pictures; go to the opera; take their daughters out; the Whitbreads came "to see doctors." Times without number Clarissa had visited Evelyn Whitbread in a nursing home. Was Evelyn ill again? Evelyn was a good deal out of sorts, said Hugh, intimating by a kind of pout or swell of his very well-covered, manly, extremely handsome, perfectly upholstered body (he was almost too well dressed always, but presumably had to be, with his little job at Court) that his wife had some internal ailment, nothing serious, which, as an old friend, Clarissa Dalloway would quite understand without requiring him to specify. Ah yes, she did of course; what a nuisance; and felt very sisterly and oddly conscious at the same time of her hat. Not the right hat for the early morning, was that it? For Hugh always made her feel, as he bustled on, raising his hat rather extravagantly and assuring her that she might be a girl of eighteen, and of course he was coming to her party to-night, Evelyn absolutely insisted, only a little late he might be after the party at the Palace to which he had to take one of Jim's boys,--she always felt a little skimpy beside Hugh; schoolgirlish; but attached to him, partly from having known him always, but she did think him a good sort in his own way, though Richard was nearly driven mad by him, and as for Peter Walsh, he had never to this day forgiven her for liking him.
She could remember scene after scene at Bourton--Peter furious; Hugh not, of course, his match in any way, but still not a positive imbecile as Peter made out; not a mere barber's block. When his old mother wanted him to give up shooting or to take her to Bath he did it, without a word; he was really unselfish, and as for saying, as Peter did, that he had no heart, no brain, nothing but the manners and breeding of an English gentleman, that was only her dear Peter at his worst; and he could be intolerable; he could be impossible; but adorable to walk with on a morning like this.
(June had drawn out every leaf on the trees. The mothers of Pimlico gave suck to their young. Messages were passing from the Fleet to the Admiralty. Arlington Street and Piccadilly seemed to chafe the very air in the Park and lift its leaves hotly, brilliantly, on waves of that divine vitality which Clarissa loved. To dance, to ride, she had adored all that.)
For they might be parted for hundreds of years, she and Peter; she never wrote a letter and his were dry sticks; but suddenly it would come over her, If he were with me now what would he say?--some days, some sights bringing him back to her calmly, without the old bitterness; which perhaps was the reward of having cared for people; they came back in the middle of St. James's Park on a fine morning--indeed they did. But Peter--however beautiful the day might be, and the trees and the grass, and the little girl in pink--Peter never saw a thing of all that. He would put on his spectacles, if she told him to; he would look. It was the state of the world that interested him; Wagner, Pope's poetry, people's characters eternally, and the defects of her own soul. How he scolded her! How they argued! She would marry a Prime Minister and stand at the top of a staircase; the perfect hostess he called her (she had cried over it in her bedroom), she had the makings of the perfect hostess, he said.
So she would still find herself arguing in St. James's Park, still making out that she had been right--and she had too--not to marry him. For in marriage a little licence, a little independence there must be between people living together day in day out in the same house; which Richard gave her, and she him. (Where was he this morning for instance? Some committee, she never asked what.) But with Peter everything had to be shared; everything gone into. And it was intolerable, and when it came to that scene in the little garden by the fountain, she had to break with him or they would have been destroyed, both of them ruined, she was convinced; though she had borne about with her for years like an arrow sticking in her heart the grief, the anguish; and then the horror of the moment when some one told her at a concert that he had married a woman met on the boat going to India! Never should she forget all that! Cold, heartless, a prude, he called her. Never could she understand how he cared. But those Indian women did presumably--silly, pretty, flimsy nincompoops. And she wasted her pity. For he was quite happy, he assured her--perfectly happy, though he had never done a thing that they talked of; his whole life had been a failure. It made her angry still.
She had reached the Park gates. She stood for a moment, looking at the omnibuses in Piccadilly.
She would not say of any one in the world now that they were this or were that. She felt very young; at the same time unspeakably aged. She sliced like a knife through everything; at the same time was outside, looking on. She had a perpetual sense, as she watched the taxi cabs, of being out, out, far out to sea and alone; she always had the feeling that it was very, very dangerous to live even one day. Not that she thought herself clever, or much out of the ordinary. How she had got through life on the few twigs of knowledge Fräulein Daniels gave them she could not think. She knew nothing; no language, no history; she scarcely read a book now, except memoirs in bed; and yet to her it was absolutely absorbing; all this; the cabs passing; and she would not say of Peter, she would not say of herself, I am this, I am that.
Her only gift was knowing people almost by instinct, she thought, walking on. If you put her in a room with some one, up went her back like a cat's; or she purred. Devonshire House, Bath House, the house with the china cockatoo, she had seen them all lit up once; and remembered Sylvia, Fred, Sally Seton--such hosts of people; and dancing all night; and the waggons plodding past to market; and driving home across the Park. She remembered once throwing a shilling into the Serpentine. But every one remembered; what she loved was this, here, now, in front of her; the fat lady in the cab. Did it matter then, she asked herself, walking towards Bond Street, did it matter that she must inevitably cease completely; all this must go on without her; did she resent it; or did it not become consoling to believe that death ended absolutely? but that somehow in the streets of London, on the ebb and flow of things, here, there, she survived, Peter survived, lived in each other, she being part, she was positive, of the trees at home; of the house there, ugly, rambling all to bits and pieces as it was; part of people she had never met; being laid out like a mist between the people she knew best, who lifted her on their branches as she had seen the trees lift the mist, but it spread ever so far, her life, herself. But what was she dreaming as she looked into Hatchards' shop window? What was she trying to recover? What image of white dawn in the country, as she read in the book spread open: Fear no more the heat o’ the sun Nor the furious winter’s rages.
This late age of the world's experience had bred in them all, all men and women, a well of tears. Tears and sorrows; courage and endurance; a perfectly upright and stoical bearing. Think, for example, of the woman she admired most, Lady Bexborough, opening the bazaar.
There were Jorrocks' Jaunts and Jollities; there were Soapy Sponge and Mrs. Asquith's Memoirs and Big Game Shooting in Nigeria, all spread open. Ever so many books there were; but none that seemed exactly right to take to Evelyn Whitbread in her nursing home. Nothing that would serve to amuse her and make that indescribably dried-up little woman look, as Clarissa came in, just for a moment cordial; before they settled down for the usual interminable talk of women's ailments. How much she wanted it--that people should look pleased as she came in, Clarissa thought and turned and walked back towards Bond Street, annoyed, because it was silly to have other reasons for doing things. Much rather would she have been one of those people like Richard who did things for themselves, whereas, she thought, waiting to cross, half the time she did things not simply, not for themselves; but to make people think this or that; perfect idiocy she knew (and now the policeman held up his hand) for no one was ever for a second taken in. Oh if she could have had her life over again! she thought, stepping on to the pavement, could have looked even differently!
She would have been, in the first place, dark like Lady Bexborough, with a skin of crumpled leather and beautiful eyes. She would have been, like Lady Bexborough, slow and stately; rather large; interested in politics like a man; with a country house; very dignified, very sincere. Instead of which she had a narrow pea-stick figure; a ridiculous little face, beaked like a bird's. That she held herself well was true; and had nice hands and feet; and dressed well, considering that she spent little. But often now this body she wore (she stopped to look at a Dutch picture), this body, with all its capacities, seemed nothing--nothing at all. She had the oddest sense of being herself invisible; unseen; unknown; there being no more marrying, no more having of children now, but only this astonishing and rather solemn progress with the rest of them, up Bond Street, this being Mrs. Dalloway; not even Clarissa any more; this being Mrs. Richard Dalloway.
Bond Street fascinated her; Bond Street early in the morning in the season; its flags flying; its shops; no splash; no glitter; one roll of tweed in the shop where her father had bought his suits for fifty years; a few pearls; salmon on an iceblock.
"That is all," she said, looking at the fishmonger's. "That is all," she repeated, pausing for a moment at the window of a glove shop where, before the War, you could buy almost perfect gloves. And her old Uncle William used to say a lady is known by her shoes and her gloves. He had turned on his bed one morning in the middle of the War. He had said, "I have had enough." Gloves and shoes; she had a passion for gloves; but her own daughter, her Elizabeth, cared not a straw for either of them.
Not a straw, she thought, going on up Bond Street to a shop where they kept flowers for her when she gave a party. Elizabeth really cared for her dog most of all. The whole house this morning smelt of tar. Still, better poor Grizzle than Miss Kilman; better distemper and tar and all the rest of it than sitting mewed in a stuffy bedroom with a prayer book! Better anything, she was inclined to say. But it might be only a phase, as Richard said, such as all girls go through. It might be falling in love. But why with Miss Kilman? who had been badly treated of course; one must make allowances for that, and Richard said she was very able, had a really historical mind. Anyhow they were inseparable, and Elizabeth, her own daughter, went to Communion; and how she dressed, how she treated people who came to lunch she did not care a bit, it being her experience that the religious ecstasy made people callous (so did causes); dulled their feelings, for Miss Kilman would do anything for the Russians, starved herself for the Austrians, but in private inflicted positive torture, so insensitive was she, dressed in a green mackintosh coat. Year in year out she wore that coat; she perspired; she was never in the room five minutes without making you feel her superiority, your inferiority; how poor she was; how rich you were; how she lived in a slum without a cushion or a bed or a rug or whatever it might be, all her soul rusted with that grievance sticking in it, her dismissal from school during the War--poor embittered unfortunate creature! For it was not her one hated but the idea of her, which undoubtedly had gathered in to itself a great deal that was not Miss Kilman; had become one of those spectres with which one battles in the night; one of those spectres who stand astride us and suck up half our life-blood, dominators and tyrants; for no doubt with another throw of the dice, had the black been uppermost and not the white, she would have loved Miss Kilman! But not in this world. No.
It rasped her, though, to have stirring about in her this brutal monster! to hear twigs cracking and feel hooves planted down in the depths of that leaf-encumbered forest, the soul; never to be content quite, or quite secure, for at any moment the brute would be stirring, this hatred, which, especially since her illness, had power to make her feel scraped, hurt in her spine; gave her physical pain, and made all pleasure in beauty, in friendship, in being well, in being loved and making her home delightful rock, quiver, and bend as if indeed there were a monster grubbing at the roots, as if the whole panoply of content were nothing but self love! this hatred!
Nonsense, nonsense! she cried to herself, pushing through the swing doors of Mulberry's the florists.
She advanced, light, tall, very upright, to be greeted at once by button-faced Miss Pym, whose hands were always bright red, as if they had been stood in cold water with the flowers.
There were flowers: delphiniums, sweet peas, bunches of lilac; and carnations, masses of carnations. There were roses; there were irises. Ah yes--so she breathed in the earthy garden sweet smell as she stood talking to Miss Pym who owed her help, and thought her kind, for kind she had been years ago; very kind, but she looked older, this year, turning her head from side to side among the irises and roses and nodding tufts of lilac with her eyes half closed, snuffing in, after the street uproar, the delicious scent, the exquisite coolness. And then, opening her eyes, how fresh like frilled linen clean from a laundry laid in wicker trays the roses looked; and dark and prim the red carnations, holding their heads up; and all the sweet peas spreading in their bowls, tinged violet, snow white, pale--as if it were the evening and girls in muslin frocks came out to pick sweet peas and roses after the superb summer's day, with its almost blue-black sky, its delphiniums, its carnations, its arum lilies was over; and it was 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; and how she loved the grey-white moths spinning in and out, over the cherry pie, over the evening primroses!
And as she began to go with Miss Pym from jar to jar, choosing, nonsense, nonsense, she said to herself, more and more gently, as if this beauty, this scent, this colour, and Miss Pym liking her, trusting her, were a wave which she let flow over her and surmount that hatred, that monster, surmount it all; and it lifted her up and up when--oh! a pistol shot in the street outside!
"Dear, those motor cars," said Miss Pym, going to the window to look, and coming back and smiling apologetically with her hands full of sweet peas, as if those motor cars, those tyres of motor cars, were all her fault.
unit 1
Part I. Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 2 days, 3 hours ago
unit 2
For Lucy had her work cut out for her.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 2 days, 3 hours ago
unit 3
The doors would be taken off their hinges; Rumpelmayer's men were coming.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 2 days, 3 hours ago
unit 5
What a lark!
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 1 day, 22 hours ago
unit 6
What a plunge!
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 1 day, 22 hours ago
unit 9
--was that it?--"I prefer men to cauliflowers"--was that it?
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 1 day, 22 hours ago
unit 12
She stiffened a little on the kerb, waiting for Durtnall's van to pass.
2 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 11 hours ago
unit 14
There she perched, never seeing him, waiting to cross, very upright.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 1 day, 3 hours ago
unit 15
For having lived in Westminster--how many years now?
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 21 hours ago
unit 17
There!
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 21 hours ago
unit 18
Out it boomed.
1 Translations, 1 Upvotes, Last Activity 21 hours ago
unit 19
First a warning, musical; then the hour, irrevocable.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 21 hours ago
unit 20
The leaden circles dissolved in the air.
2 Translations, 1 Upvotes, Last Activity 17 minutes ago
unit 21
Such fools we are, she thought, crossing Victoria Street.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 17 minutes ago
unit 24
For it was the middle of June.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 3 hours ago
unit 26
It was June.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 3 hours ago
unit 27
The King and Queen were at the Palace.
1 Translations, 2 Upvotes, Last Activity 3 hours ago
unit 30
"Good-morning to you, Clarissa!"
1 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity 3 hours ago
unit 31
said Hugh, rather extravagantly, for they had known each other as children.
1 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity 3 hours ago
unit 32
"Where are you off to?"
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 33
"I love walking in London," said Mrs. Dalloway.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 34
"Really it's better than walking in the country."
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 35
They had just come up--unfortunately--to see doctors.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 38
Was Evelyn ill again?
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 41
Not the right hat for the early morning, was that it?
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 45
(June had drawn out every leaf on the trees.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 46
The mothers of Pimlico gave suck to their young.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 47
Messages were passing from the Fleet to the Admiralty.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 49
To dance, to ride, she had adored all that.)
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 52
He would put on his spectacles, if she told him to; he would look.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 54
How he scolded her!
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 55
How they argued!
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 59
(Where was he this morning for instance?
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 60
Some committee, she never asked what.)
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 61
But with Peter everything had to be shared; everything gone into.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 63
Never should she forget all that!
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 64
Cold, heartless, a prude, he called her.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 65
Never could she understand how he cared.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 66
unit 67
And she wasted her pity.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 69
It made her angry still.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 70
She had reached the Park gates.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 71
She stood for a moment, looking at the omnibuses in Piccadilly.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 73
She felt very young; at the same time unspeakably aged.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 76
Not that she thought herself clever, or much out of the ordinary.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 82
She remembered once throwing a shilling into the Serpentine.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 86
But what was she dreaming as she looked into Hatchards' shop window?
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 87
What was she trying to recover?
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 97
Oh if she could have had her life over again!
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 106
"That is all," she said, looking at the fishmonger's.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 109
He had turned on his bed one morning in the middle of the War.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 110
He had said, "I have had enough."
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 113
Elizabeth really cared for her dog most of all.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 114
The whole house this morning smelt of tar.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 116
Better anything, she was inclined to say.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 117
unit 118
It might be falling in love.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 119
But why with Miss Kilman?
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 124
But not in this world.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 125
No.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 126
unit 128
this hatred!
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 129
Nonsense, nonsense!
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 133
There were roses; there were irises.
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None
unit 137
a pistol shot in the street outside!
0 Translations, 0 Upvotes, Last Activity None

Ubicación de los capítulos:
Part I: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5219/
Part II: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5220/
Part III: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5221/
Part IV: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5222/
Part V: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5223/
Part VI: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5224/
Part VII: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5225/
Part VIII/VIII: https://translatihan.com/couples/en-es/articles/5226/

by soybeba 1 month, 1 week ago

La Señora Dalloway es la obra más conocida de su autora, Virginia Woolf, quien la escribió entre los años 1922 y 1924, y es considerada entre las mejores novelas de habla inglesa.
La obra transcurre durante un solo un día de la vida de una dama de la alta sociedad inglesa, registrando características de su vida cotidiana por medio de la acción y de los pensamientos de los personajes, que reflejan la estructura social y cuestiones tales como capitalismo y colonialismo, situación de la mujer, así como aspectos sicológicos, sexuales y valores en la Gran Bretaña de la primera posguerra.

by soybeba 1 month, 1 week ago

Part I.
Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself.
For Lucy had her work cut out for her. The doors would be taken off their hinges; Rumpelmayer's men were coming. And then, thought Clarissa Dalloway, what a morning--fresh as if issued to children on a beach.
What a lark! What a plunge! For so it had always seemed to her, when, with a little squeak of the hinges, which she could hear now, she had burst open the French windows and plunged at Bourton into the open air. How fresh, how calm, stiller than this of course, the air was in the early morning; like the flap of a wave; the kiss of a wave; chill and sharp and yet (for a girl of eighteen as she then was) solemn, feeling as she did, standing there at the open window, that something awful was about to happen; looking at the flowers, at the trees with the smoke winding off them and the rooks rising, falling; standing and looking until Peter Walsh said, "Musing among the vegetables?"--was that it?--"I prefer men to cauliflowers"--was that it? He must have said it at breakfast one morning when she had gone out on to the terrace--Peter Walsh. He would be back from India one of these days, June or July, she forgot which, for his letters were awfully dull; it was his sayings one remembered; his eyes, his pocket-knife, his smile, his grumpiness and, when millions of things had utterly vanished--how strange it was!--a few sayings like this about cabbages.
She stiffened a little on the kerb, waiting for Durtnall's van to pass. A charming woman, Scrope Purvis thought her (knowing her as one does know people who live next door to one in Westminster); a touch of the bird about her, of the jay, blue-green, light, vivacious, though she was over fifty, and grown very white since her illness. There she perched, never seeing him, waiting to cross, very upright.
For having lived in Westminster--how many years now? over twenty,--one feels even in the midst of the traffic, or waking at night, Clarissa was positive, a particular hush, or solemnity; an indescribable pause; a suspense (but that might be her heart, affected, they said, by influenza) before Big Ben strikes. There! Out it boomed. First a warning, musical; then the hour, irrevocable. The leaden circles dissolved in the air. Such fools we are, she thought, crossing Victoria Street. For Heaven only knows why one loves it so, how one sees it so, making it up, building it round one, tumbling it, creating it every moment afresh; but the veriest frumps, the most dejected of miseries sitting on doorsteps (drink their downfall) do the same; can't be dealt with, she felt positive, by Acts of Parliament for that very reason: they love life. In people's eyes, in the swing, tramp, and trudge; in the bellow and the uproar; the carriages, motor cars, omnibuses, vans, sandwich men shuffling and swinging; brass bands; barrel organs; in the triumph and the jingle and the strange high singing of some aeroplane overhead was what she loved; life; London; this moment of June.
For it was the middle of June. The War was over, except for some one like Mrs. Foxcroft at the Embassy last night eating her heart out because that nice boy was killed and now the old Manor House must go to a cousin; or Lady Bexborough who opened a bazaar, they said, with the telegram in her hand, John, her favourite, killed; but it was over; thank Heaven--over. It was June. The King and Queen were at the Palace. And everywhere, though it was still so early, there was a beating, a stirring of galloping ponies, tapping of cricket bats; Lords, Ascot, Ranelagh and all the rest of it; wrapped in the soft mesh of the grey-blue morning air, which, as the day wore on, would unwind them, and set down on their lawns and pitches the bouncing ponies, whose forefeet just struck the ground and up they sprung, the whirling young men, and laughing girls in their transparent muslins who, even now, after dancing all night, were taking their absurd woolly dogs for a run; and even now, at this hour, discreet old dowagers were shooting out in their motor cars on errands of mystery; and the shopkeepers were fidgeting in their windows with their paste and diamonds, their lovely old sea-green brooches in eighteenth-century settings to tempt Americans (but one must economise, not buy things rashly for Elizabeth), and she, too, loving it as she did with an absurd and faithful passion, being part of it, since her people were courtiers once in the time of the Georges, she, too, was going that very night to kindle and illuminate; to give her party. But how strange, on entering the Park, the silence; the mist; the hum; the slow-swimming happy ducks; the pouched birds waddling; and who should be coming along with his back against the Government buildings, most appropriately, carrying a despatch box stamped with the Royal Arms, who but Hugh Whitbread; her old friend Hugh--the admirable Hugh!
"Good-morning to you, Clarissa!" said Hugh, rather extravagantly, for they had known each other as children. "Where are you off to?"
"I love walking in London," said Mrs. Dalloway. "Really it's better than walking in the country."
They had just come up--unfortunately--to see doctors. Other people came to see pictures; go to the opera; take their daughters out; the Whitbreads came "to see doctors." Times without number Clarissa had visited Evelyn Whitbread in a nursing home. Was Evelyn ill again? Evelyn was a good deal out of sorts, said Hugh, intimating by a kind of pout or swell of his very well-covered, manly, extremely handsome, perfectly upholstered body (he was almost too well dressed always, but presumably had to be, with his little job at Court) that his wife had some internal ailment, nothing serious, which, as an old friend, Clarissa Dalloway would quite understand without requiring him to specify. Ah yes, she did of course; what a nuisance; and felt very sisterly and oddly conscious at the same time of her hat. Not the right hat for the early morning, was that it? For Hugh always made her feel, as he bustled on, raising his hat rather extravagantly and assuring her that she might be a girl of eighteen, and of course he was coming to her party to-night, Evelyn absolutely insisted, only a little late he might be after the party at the Palace to which he had to take one of Jim's boys,--she always felt a little skimpy beside Hugh; schoolgirlish; but attached to him, partly from having known him always, but she did think him a good sort in his own way, though Richard was nearly driven mad by him, and as for Peter Walsh, he had never to this day forgiven her for liking him.
She could remember scene after scene at Bourton--Peter furious; Hugh not, of course, his match in any way, but still not a positive imbecile as Peter made out; not a mere barber's block. When his old mother wanted him to give up shooting or to take her to Bath he did it, without a word; he was really unselfish, and as for saying, as Peter did, that he had no heart, no brain, nothing but the manners and breeding of an English gentleman, that was only her dear Peter at his worst; and he could be intolerable; he could be impossible; but adorable to walk with on a morning like this.
(June had drawn out every leaf on the trees. The mothers of Pimlico gave suck to their young. Messages were passing from the Fleet to the Admiralty. Arlington Street and Piccadilly seemed to chafe the very air in the Park and lift its leaves hotly, brilliantly, on waves of that divine vitality which Clarissa loved. To dance, to ride, she had adored all that.)
For they might be parted for hundreds of years, she and Peter; she never wrote a letter and his were dry sticks; but suddenly it would come over her, If he were with me now what would he say?--some days, some sights bringing him back to her calmly, without the old bitterness; which perhaps was the reward of having cared for people; they came back in the middle of St. James's Park on a fine morning--indeed they did. But Peter--however beautiful the day might be, and the trees and the grass, and the little girl in pink--Peter never saw a thing of all that. He would put on his spectacles, if she told him to; he would look. It was the state of the world that interested him; Wagner, Pope's poetry, people's characters eternally, and the defects of her own soul. How he scolded her! How they argued! She would marry a Prime Minister and stand at the top of a staircase; the perfect hostess he called her (she had cried over it in her bedroom), she had the makings of the perfect hostess, he said.
So she would still find herself arguing in St. James's Park, still making out that she had been right--and she had too--not to marry him. For in marriage a little licence, a little independence there must be between people living together day in day out in the same house; which Richard gave her, and she him. (Where was he this morning for instance? Some committee, she never asked what.) But with Peter everything had to be shared; everything gone into. And it was intolerable, and when it came to that scene in the little garden by the fountain, she had to break with him or they would have been destroyed, both of them ruined, she was convinced; though she had borne about with her for years like an arrow sticking in her heart the grief, the anguish; and then the horror of the moment when some one told her at a concert that he had married a woman met on the boat going to India! Never should she forget all that! Cold, heartless, a prude, he called her. Never could she understand how he cared. But those Indian women did presumably--silly, pretty, flimsy nincompoops. And she wasted her pity. For he was quite happy, he assured her--perfectly happy, though he had never done a thing that they talked of; his whole life had been a failure. It made her angry still.
She had reached the Park gates. She stood for a moment, looking at the omnibuses in Piccadilly.
She would not say of any one in the world now that they were this or were that. She felt very young; at the same time unspeakably aged. She sliced like a knife through everything; at the same time was outside, looking on. She had a perpetual sense, as she watched the taxi cabs, of being out, out, far out to sea and alone; she always had the feeling that it was very, very dangerous to live even one day. Not that she thought herself clever, or much out of the ordinary. How she had got through life on the few twigs of knowledge Fräulein Daniels gave them she could not think. She knew nothing; no language, no history; she scarcely read a book now, except memoirs in bed; and yet to her it was absolutely absorbing; all this; the cabs passing; and she would not say of Peter, she would not say of herself, I am this, I am that.
Her only gift was knowing people almost by instinct, she thought, walking on. If you put her in a room with some one, up went her back like a cat's; or she purred. Devonshire House, Bath House, the house with the china cockatoo, she had seen them all lit up once; and remembered Sylvia, Fred, Sally Seton--such hosts of people; and dancing all night; and the waggons plodding past to market; and driving home across the Park. She remembered once throwing a shilling into the Serpentine. But every one remembered; what she loved was this, here, now, in front of her; the fat lady in the cab. Did it matter then, she asked herself, walking towards Bond Street, did it matter that she must inevitably cease completely; all this must go on without her; did she resent it; or did it not become consoling to believe that death ended absolutely? but that somehow in the streets of London, on the ebb and flow of things, here, there, she survived, Peter survived, lived in each other, she being part, she was positive, of the trees at home; of the house there, ugly, rambling all to bits and pieces as it was; part of people she had never met; being laid out like a mist between the people she knew best, who lifted her on their branches as she had seen the trees lift the mist, but it spread ever so far, her life, herself. But what was she dreaming as she looked into Hatchards' shop window? What was she trying to recover? What image of white dawn in the country, as she read in the book spread open:
Fear no more the heat o’ the sun
Nor the furious winter’s rages.
This late age of the world's experience had bred in them all, all men and women, a well of tears. Tears and sorrows; courage and endurance; a perfectly upright and stoical bearing. Think, for example, of the woman she admired most, Lady Bexborough, opening the bazaar.
There were Jorrocks' Jaunts and Jollities; there were Soapy Sponge and Mrs. Asquith's Memoirs and Big Game Shooting in Nigeria, all spread open. Ever so many books there were; but none that seemed exactly right to take to Evelyn Whitbread in her nursing home. Nothing that would serve to amuse her and make that indescribably dried-up little woman look, as Clarissa came in, just for a moment cordial; before they settled down for the usual interminable talk of women's ailments. How much she wanted it--that people should look pleased as she came in, Clarissa thought and turned and walked back towards Bond Street, annoyed, because it was silly to have other reasons for doing things. Much rather would she have been one of those people like Richard who did things for themselves, whereas, she thought, waiting to cross, half the time she did things not simply, not for themselves; but to make people think this or that; perfect idiocy she knew (and now the policeman held up his hand) for no one was ever for a second taken in. Oh if she could have had her life over again! she thought, stepping on to the pavement, could have looked even differently!
She would have been, in the first place, dark like Lady Bexborough, with a skin of crumpled leather and beautiful eyes. She would have been, like Lady Bexborough, slow and stately; rather large; interested in politics like a man; with a country house; very dignified, very sincere. Instead of which she had a narrow pea-stick figure; a ridiculous little face, beaked like a bird's. That she held herself well was true; and had nice hands and feet; and dressed well, considering that she spent little. But often now this body she wore (she stopped to look at a Dutch picture), this body, with all its capacities, seemed nothing--nothing at all. She had the oddest sense of being herself invisible; unseen; unknown; there being no more marrying, no more having of children now, but only this astonishing and rather solemn progress with the rest of them, up Bond Street, this being Mrs. Dalloway; not even Clarissa any more; this being Mrs. Richard Dalloway.
Bond Street fascinated her; Bond Street early in the morning in the season; its flags flying; its shops; no splash; no glitter; one roll of tweed in the shop where her father had bought his suits for fifty years; a few pearls; salmon on an iceblock.
"That is all," she said, looking at the fishmonger's. "That is all," she repeated, pausing for a moment at the window of a glove shop where, before the War, you could buy almost perfect gloves. And her old Uncle William used to say a lady is known by her shoes and her gloves. He had turned on his bed one morning in the middle of the War. He had said, "I have had enough." Gloves and shoes; she had a passion for gloves; but her own daughter, her Elizabeth, cared not a straw for either of them.
Not a straw, she thought, going on up Bond Street to a shop where they kept flowers for her when she gave a party. Elizabeth really cared for her dog most of all. The whole house this morning smelt of tar. Still, better poor Grizzle than Miss Kilman; better distemper and tar and all the rest of it than sitting mewed in a stuffy bedroom with a prayer book! Better anything, she was inclined to say. But it might be only a phase, as Richard said, such as all girls go through. It might be falling in love. But why with Miss Kilman? who had been badly treated of course; one must make allowances for that, and Richard said she was very able, had a really historical mind. Anyhow they were inseparable, and Elizabeth, her own daughter, went to Communion; and how she dressed, how she treated people who came to lunch she did not care a bit, it being her experience that the religious ecstasy made people callous (so did causes); dulled their feelings, for Miss Kilman would do anything for the Russians, starved herself for the Austrians, but in private inflicted positive torture, so insensitive was she, dressed in a green mackintosh coat. Year in year out she wore that coat; she perspired; she was never in the room five minutes without making you feel her superiority, your inferiority; how poor she was; how rich you were; how she lived in a slum without a cushion or a bed or a rug or whatever it might be, all her soul rusted with that grievance sticking in it, her dismissal from school during the War--poor embittered unfortunate creature! For it was not her one hated but the idea of her, which undoubtedly had gathered in to itself a great deal that was not Miss Kilman; had become one of those spectres with which one battles in the night; one of those spectres who stand astride us and suck up half our life-blood, dominators and tyrants; for no doubt with another throw of the dice, had the black been uppermost and not the white, she would have loved Miss Kilman! But not in this world. No.
It rasped her, though, to have stirring about in her this brutal monster! to hear twigs cracking and feel hooves planted down in the depths of that leaf-encumbered forest, the soul; never to be content quite, or quite secure, for at any moment the brute would be stirring, this hatred, which, especially since her illness, had power to make her feel scraped, hurt in her spine; gave her physical pain, and made all pleasure in beauty, in friendship, in being well, in being loved and making her home delightful rock, quiver, and bend as if indeed there were a monster grubbing at the roots, as if the whole panoply of content were nothing but self love! this hatred!
Nonsense, nonsense! she cried to herself, pushing through the swing doors of Mulberry's the florists.
She advanced, light, tall, very upright, to be greeted at once by button-faced Miss Pym, whose hands were always bright red, as if they had been stood in cold water with the flowers.
There were flowers: delphiniums, sweet peas, bunches of lilac; and carnations, masses of carnations. There were roses; there were irises. Ah yes--so she breathed in the earthy garden sweet smell as she stood talking to Miss Pym who owed her help, and thought her kind, for kind she had been years ago; very kind, but she looked older, this year, turning her head from side to side among the irises and roses and nodding tufts of lilac with her eyes half closed, snuffing in, after the street uproar, the delicious scent, the exquisite coolness. And then, opening her eyes, how fresh like frilled linen clean from a laundry laid in wicker trays the roses looked; and dark and prim the red carnations, holding their heads up; and all the sweet peas spreading in their bowls, tinged violet, snow white, pale--as if it were the evening and girls in muslin frocks came out to pick sweet peas and roses after the superb summer's day, with its almost blue-black sky, its delphiniums, its carnations, its arum lilies was over; and it was 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; and how she loved the grey-white moths spinning in and out, over the cherry pie, over the evening primroses!
And as she began to go with Miss Pym from jar to jar, choosing, nonsense, nonsense, she said to herself, more and more gently, as if this beauty, this scent, this colour, and Miss Pym liking her, trusting her, were a wave which she let flow over her and surmount that hatred, that monster, surmount it all; and it lifted her up and up when--oh! a pistol shot in the street outside!
"Dear, those motor cars," said Miss Pym, going to the window to look, and coming back and smiling apologetically with her hands full of sweet peas, as if those motor cars, those tyres of motor cars, were all her fault.