Virginia Woolf, an English author and essayist in the twentieth century and she was considered as one of the most influential modernist writers. In early days, it was not easy for women to attend formal schools and acquire education. While Virginia’s brothers were sent to Cambridge, Virginia was educated at home by private tutors and parents. Virginia's father, Sir Leslie Stephen, just like any other parents in that era, did not believe in investing formal schooling to their daughters. During her life, Virginia Woolf had written a number of publications such as “The Voyage Out”, “Mrs. Dalloway”, “To The Lighthouse”, “Orlando” and “A Room of One’s Own”. She has been a very important figure in English literature and also the founder and member of the Bloomsbury Group. Virginia Woolf was also a pioneer in women empowerment which she spent her whole life promoting equal education opportunity to both sexes. There is no doubt Woolf had a great achievement in her work regardless of her sex and education in her era; but unfortunately she committed suicide due to depression and other various reasons. It was believed that her suicidal personality was not caused by single events but by a series of tragedies. Although we cannot conclude her suicide by exact reason but we can easily find traces that lead to her self-destructive behavior and personality. It was not easy for women to acquire proper education and to learn writing in the twentieth century, not to mention how hard it could be to become an official writer. By looking at the title of Virginia’s Woolf’s book-length essay “A Room of One’s Own”, we can already notice Woolf’s concept: “a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction” (Woolf, 4). Woolf noted that women have been kept from writing because of their relative poverty, and financial freedom will bring women the freedom to write: "in the first place, to have a room of her own [] was out of the question, unless her parents were exceptionally rich or very noble" (Woolf, 52). She also complained that: "women, have not had a dog's chance of writing poetry. That is why I have laid so much stress on money and a room of one's own” (Woolf, 106). In this extended essay, Woolf created a fictional character Judith Shakespeare who is William Shakespeare’s sister. The role of this character was to demonstrate that even a woman with William Shakespeare's gifts would have been denied the same opportunities to develop them because of the education, training, and chances that were not offered to women. Like Woolf herself, who stayed at home while her brothers went off to school, Judith stays at home while William goes off to school. Judith is forced to stay at home: "She was as adventurous, as imaginative, as agog to see the world as he was. But she was not sent to school” (Woolf, 47). Judith has