Virginia Woolf and Music. Adriana L. Varga

Virginia Woolf and Music - Adriana L. Varga


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(S 190).

      Other members of the Bloomsbury Group had a less passionate but nevertheless decisive response to music. For Lytton Strachey, for instance, music had been a familiar part of family life since his childhood. Virginia Woolf’s unflattering likeness of him in her character St. John Hirst in The Voyage Out rather unkindly says that he had “no taste for music, and a few dancing lessons at Cambridge had only put him in possession of the anatomy of a waltz, without imparting any of its spirit” (VO 157). But Strachey’s ungainly walk and elongated body probably had more to do with this little caricature than with any truth about his musical sensibilities. According to Holroyd, Strachey’s mother, Jane Maria Strachey, “enjoyed classical music, sitting Lytton on her knee while she played songs on the piano” (6), while his brother Oliver, hoping to become a professional concert player, had studied piano with the famous teacher Theodor Leschetizky in Vienna, thus becoming one of only two Englishmen to attend Brahms’s funeral in that city’s central cemetery (Levy, Letters 47). Their younger brother James, who has become best known as the general editor of Freud’s works in English, was also an authority on Haydn, Mozart, and Wagner, and in the 1950s contributed notes and commentaries for the Glyndebourne opera programs (Holroyd xv).


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