THE
MIDDLE YEARS
BY
HENRY JAMES
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
Published November, 1917
| By HENRY JAMES |
| —— |
| A SMALL BOY AND OTHERS |
| NOTES OF A SON AND BROTHER |
| THE MIDDLE YEARS |
| NOTES ON NOVELISTS WITH SOME OTHER NOTES |
| [I, ] [II, ] [III, ] [IV, ] [V, ] [VI, ] [VII] |
EDITOR'S NOTE
The following pages represent all that Henry James lived to write of a volume of autobiographical reminiscences to which he had given the name of one of his own short stories, The Middle Years. It was designed to follow on Notes of a Son and Brother and to extend to about the same length. The chapters here printed were dictated during the autumn of 1914. They were laid aside for other work toward the end of the year and were not revised by the author. A few quite evident slips have been corrected and the marking of the paragraphs—which he usually deferred till the final revision—has been completed.
In dictating The Middle Years he used no notes, and beyond an allusion or two in the unfinished volume itself there is no indication of the course which the book would have taken or the precise period it was intended to cover.