A reclusive, hypersensitive artist with piercing, meticulous inner vision.
Retreating from London society into the quiet of Monk's House, tending her garden and filling notebooks with prose so layered it seemed to pulse with private consciousness — this is the snake in its element. Virginia Woolf's stream-of-consciousness technique in *Mrs Dalloway* and *The Waves* mirrors the snake's characteristic ability to perceive reality through a hypersensitive interior lens, detecting emotional tremors invisible to others. Her famous observation that "a woman must have money and a room of her own" reveals the snake's instinct for protective solitude and self-contained creative power. Like the snake, Woolf was neither cold nor withdrawn by indifference — she was simply operating on a frequency too refined for casual social noise, her genius coiled inward, precise, and relentlessly observant.
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