Elsewhere in the book, Woolf writes, “These changes of mood wear us out.”
‘Far From the Tree’ Author Andrew Solomon’s Book Bag|Andrew Solomon|December 4, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Oats, Captain Trevithick's head boiler-maker, was constructing the boilers; Woolf came into the yard, and examined them.
Life of Richard Trevithick, Volume II (of 2)|Francis Trevithick
Among the most prominent of these were Trevithick and Woolf.
The Life of George Stephenson and of his Son Robert Stephenson|Samuel Smiles
This story Mrs. Woolf tells in nearly five hundred-and-fifty pages of fairly close print.
The London Mercury, Vol. I, Nos. 1-6, November 1919 to April 1920|Various
But, Phebe, they have a young Woolf over there; so look out he doesn't catch you.
A Little Girl of Long Ago|Amanda Millie Douglas
Assuredly, Mrs. Woolf is not of the company on whose banner is inscribed "No discrimination!"
Since Czanne|Clive Bell
British Dictionary definitions for Woolf
Woolf
/ (wʊlf) /
noun
Leonard Sidney. 1880–1969, English publisher and political writer
his wife, Virginia . 1882–1941, English novelist and critic. Her novels, which include Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), The Waves (1931), and Between the Acts (1941), employ such techniques as the interior monologue and stream of consciousness