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题目材料:
Scholars have frequently described Virginia Woolf' s prose as poetic, a description that alludes to the rhythm and sound of her sentences, the lyric plotlessness of her novels, and the self-conscious interiority of her characters. But poetic is a term that invites question because it suggests that Woolf does not tackle the pedestrian world of ordinary life or that her novels disdain prosaic subjects. While Woolf sought to dispense with the heavy apparatus of the realistic and naturalistic novel in order to render the inner workings of the mind, she knew that the modern novel could not flee from the external world of everyday things. Her characters do not dwell solely in their heads; they dwell in the physical world also.
以上解析由 考满分老师提供。