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    The Diary of a Man of Fifty

    by Henry James
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    Page 1 of 27
    (1879)

    (underscores denote italics)

    Florence, _April 5th_, 1874.--They told me I should find Italy greatly
    changed; and in seven-and-twenty years there is room for changes. But to
    me everything is so perfectly the same that I seem to be living my youth
    over again; all the forgotten impressions of that enchanting time come
    back to me. At the moment they were powerful enough; but they afterwards
    faded away. What in the world became of them? Whatever becomes of such
    things, in the long intervals of consciousness? Where do they hide
    themselves away? in what unvisited cupboards and crannies of our being do
    they preserve themselves? They are like the lines of a letter written in
    sympathetic ink; hold the letter to the fire for a while and the grateful
    warmth brings out the invisible words. It is the warmth of this yellow
    sun of Florence that has been restoring the text of my own young romance;
    the thing has been lying before me today as a clear, fresh page. There
    have been moments during the last ten years when I have fell so
    portentously old, so fagged and finished, that I should have taken as a
    very bad joke any intimation that this present sense of juvenility was
    still in store for me. It won't last, at any rate; so I had better make

    the best of it. But I confess it surprises me. I have led too serious a
    life; but that perhaps, after all, preserves one's youth. At all events,
    I have travelled too far, I have worked too hard, I have lived in brutal
    climates and associated with tiresome people. When a man has reached his
    fifty-second year without being, materially, the worse for wear--when he
    has fair health, a fair fortune, a tidy conscience and a complete
    exemption from embarrassing relatives--I suppose he is bound, in
    delicacy, to write himself happy. But I confess I shirk this obligation.
    I have not been miserable; I won't go so far as to say that--or at least
    as to write it. But happiness--positive happiness--would have been
    something different. I don't know that it would have been better, by all
    measurements--that it would have left me better off at the present time.
    But it certainly would have made this difference--that I should not have
    been reduced, in pursuit of pleasant images, to disinter a buried episode
    of more than a quarter of a century ago. I should have found
    entertainment more--what shall I call it?--more contemporaneous. I
    should have had a wife and children, and I should not be in the way of
    making, as the French say, infidelities to the present. Of course it's a
    great gain to have had an escape, not to have committed an act of
    thumping folly; and I suppose that, whatever serious step one might have
    taken at twenty-five, after a struggle, and with a violent effort, and
    however one's
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