I feel as if Woolf's passage's mode is considered descriptive. I consider it descriptive because he is constantly describing the moth its activities, and everything that is going on in his surroundings. When the moth started to lose life Woolf stated that "[...] he was in difficulties; he could no longer raise himself; his legs struggled vainly"
(Woolf 2). This quote shows how close he was paying attention to this moth. Woolf described everything in depth, so the reader could receive a decent visual of what was actually going on and what he was experiencing.
