Its Pocahontas
 


"Walking free from her headache...she can face the devil, but she must keep walking, she must not turn back."
(Cunningham, 167)
When I was reading the penultimul chapter of Mrs. Woolf, Virginia has analyzed that when someone dies they become so insignificant after seeing the little dead bird in her backyard. She feels that death is near. The narrator tells the crowd her thoughts by using what it seems to be an allusion to the bible as she walks into town planing on leaving for good. 

Analysis:
When I was reading her thoughts as she was walking to the train station, the narrator tells how she can feel that the headaches are trying to come back to her. She refers to them as taking form of the devil. When the narrator mentions that she "must not turn back" this becomes similar to the story of Lot's family from the bible. She leaves from this place that is the home to all of her troubles and does not look back just like when Lot leaves Sodom and Gomorrah.



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Sweet and Heady