In this passage from chapter four, the narrator draws a general
statement from the particular situation of Orlando. She suggests that
gender identity is not fixed, but can change throughout life
independently of biological makeup. The novel explores many
permutations of this idea. Woolf believes that sexes are intermixed,
that though an individual may seem a woman, she really has the
qualities of a man, and vice versa.
This idea applies not only to the literal gender of individuals, but more
broadly to the gender roles within society. Once Orlando becomes a
woman, she realizes all the opportunities and rights that are now
closed to her. Though she feels no different at all, society treats her
differently because of the clothes she wears. Encouraging the equality
of gender roles is a point that Woolf makes in many of her novels.