Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf is her first fully realized experimental novel in aesthetics. Spanning the events of a single day, this novel employs Woolf’s distinctive "stream of consciousness" technique to depict post-war England and the fleeting moments through the subjective experiences of its characters. Central to the narrative are the existential reflections of two protagonists: an aristocratic Parliamentarian’s wife planning and hosting her annual party and a war veteran suffering from psychological trauma who ultimately takes his own life. Though these two characters never meet, they converge in an invisible intersection of time and space, merging and becoming one in the heroine’s profound experience of a new dimension of life.