Virginia Woolf\'s second novel, Night and Day (1919), portrays the gradual changes in a society, the patterns and conventions of which are slowly disintegrating; where the representatives of the younger generation struggle to forge their own way, for \'...life has to be faced: to be rejected; then accepted on new terms with rapture\'.
Woolf begins to experiment with the novel form while demonstrating her affection for the literature of the pas.
Virginia Woolf\'s second novel, Night and Day (1919), portrays the gradual changes in a society, the patterns and conventions of which are slowly disintegrating; where the representatives of the younger generation struggle to forge their own way, for \'...life has to be faced: to be rejected; then accepted on new terms with rapture\'