The beautiful and complex narrative of Mrs. Dalloway seems to defy readers ' powers of description. David Dowling 's Mapping Streams of Consciousness exemplifies a sense one must ``reconstruct ' ' the text in order to understand it. In a section entitled ``A Reading, ' ' Dowling dissects the novel into neat structural packages so the reader can easily study its anatomy. He includes maps of London showing various characters ' movements and intersections, an hourly chronology of the day of Clarissa 's party, character sketches condensed from details scattered in the text, and, in the appendix, a kind of ``miniature concordance ' ' that provides counts for some 32 words (``India ' ' appears 25 times).
Other studies of Mrs. Dalloway are less detailed but serve as well to illustrate the difficulties of describing its narrative patterns. In ``Metaphor, Metonymy, and Ideology: Language and Perception in Mrs. Dalloway, ' ': Teresa
Cited: Dodd, Elizabeth. ```On the Floor of the Mind ': Sentence Shape and Rhythm in Mrs. Dalloway. ' ' The Midwest Quarterly 36:3 (1995): 275-288. Dowling, David Ebert, Teresa. ``Metaphor, Metonymy, and Ideology: Language and Perception in Mrs. Dalloway. ' ' Language and Style 18:2(1985): 152-164. Forster, E.M Hart, Mickey. Drumming at the Edge of Magic: A Journey Into the Spirit of Percussion. San Francisco: Harper, 1990. Schulze, Robin Gail Stockton, Sharon. ``Turbulence in the Text: Narrative Complexity in Mrs. Dalloway. ' ' New Orleans Review 18:1 (1991): 46-55. Webb, Caroline Woolf, Virginia. Mrs. Dalloway. San Diego, New York, London: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1925. --.The Diary of Virginia Woolf: Volume Two, 1920-1924