Plot Overview
Note: To the Lighthouse is divided into three sections: “The Window,” “Time
Passes,” and “The Lighthouse.” Each section is fragmented into
stream-of-consciousness contributions from various narrators.
“The Window” opens just
before the start of World War I. Mr. Ramsay and Mrs. Ramsay bring their eight
children to their summer home in the Hebrides (a group of islands west of Scotland).
Across the bay from their house stands a large lighthouse. Six-year-old James
Ramsay wants desperately to go to the lighthouse, and Mrs. Ramsay tells him
that they will go the next day if the weather permits. James reacts gleefully,
but Mr. Ramsay tells him coldly that the weather looks to be foul. James
resents his father and believes that he enjoys being cruel to James and his
siblings.
The Ramsays host a
number of guests, including the dour Charles Tansley, who admires Mr. Ramsay’s
work as a metaphysical philosopher. Also at the house is Lily Briscoe, a young
painter who begins a portrait of Mrs. Ramsay. Mrs. Ramsay wants Lily to marry
William Bankes, an old friend of the Ramsays, but Lily resolves to remain
single. Mrs. Ramsay does manage to arrange another marriage, however, between
Paul Rayley and Minta Doyle, two of their acquaintances.
During the course of the
afternoon, Paul proposes to Minta, Lily begins her painting, Mrs. Ramsay
soothes the resentful James, and Mr. Ramsay frets over his shortcomings as a
philosopher, periodically turning to Mrs. Ramsay for comfort. That evening, the
Ramsays host a seemingly ill-fated dinner party. Paul and Minta are late
returning from their walk on the beach with two of the Ramsays’ children. Lily
bristles at outspoken comments made by Charles Tansley, who suggests that women
can neither paint nor write. Mr. Ramsay reacts rudely when Augustus Carmichael,
a poet, asks for a second plate of soup. As the night draws on, however, these
missteps right themselves, and the guests come together to make a memorable
evening.
The joy, however, like
the party itself, cannot last, and as Mrs. Ramsay leaves her guests in the
dining room, she reflects that the event has already slipped into the past.
Later, she joins her husband in the parlor. The couple sits quietly together,
until Mr. Ramsay’s characteristic insecurities interrupt their peace. He wants
his wife to tell him that she loves him. Mrs. Ramsay is not one to make such
pronouncements, but she concedes to his point made earlier in the day that the
weather will be too rough for a trip to the lighthouse the next day. Mr. Ramsay
thus knows that Mrs. Ramsay loves him. Night falls, and one night quickly
becomes another.
Time passes more quickly
as the novel enters the “Time Passes” segment. War breaks out across Europe. Mrs. Ramsay dies suddenly one night. Andrew
Ramsay, her oldest son, is killed in battle, and his sister Prue dies from an
illness related to childbirth. The family no longer vacations at its
summerhouse, which falls into a state of disrepair: weeds take over the garden
and spiders nest in the house. Ten years pass before the family returns. Mrs.
McNab, the housekeeper, employs a few other women to help set the house in
order. They rescue the house from oblivion and decay, and everything is in
order when Lily Briscoe returns.
In “The Lighthouse”
section, time returns to the slow detail of shifting points of view, similar in
style to “The Window.” Mr. Ramsay declares that he and James and Cam, one of his daughters, will journey to the
lighthouse. On the morning of the voyage, delays throw him into a fit of
temper. He appeals to Lily for sympathy, but, unlike Mrs. Ramsay, she is unable
to provide him with what he needs. The Ramsays set off, and Lily takes her
place on the lawn, determined to complete a painting she started but abandoned
on her last visit. James and Cam bristle at
their father’s blustery behavior and are embarrassed by his constant self-pity.
Still, as the boat reaches its destination, the children feel a fondness for
him. Even James, whose skill as a sailor Mr. Ramsay praises, experiences a
moment of connection with his father, though James so willfully resents him.
Across the bay, Lily puts the finishing touch on her painting. She makes a
definitive stroke on the canvas and puts her brush down, finally having
achieved her vision
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