John Woolf's Memoir

234 Words1 Pages
In the excerpt from her memoirs, Woolf means to make the point that one does not necessarily have to have experienced the exact same event as someone else to have empathy for them. "But from the memory of my own passion I am still able to construct an idea of the sporting passion," Woolf explains. Her passion for fishing faded shortly after the described experience, but the memory of its strength remained, allowing her to understand the same enthusiasm for sports in others. Likewise, "one often has to make do with seeds; the germs of what might have been ... I pigeonhole 'fishing' thus with other momentary glimpses; like those rapid glances, for example, that I cast into basements when I walk in London streets," she states. These "glances"