Volume 1
The letters of William James / edited by his son, Henry James.
- William James
- Date:
- 1920
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The letters of William James / edited by his son, Henry James. Source: Wellcome Collection.
380/392 page 342
![company with the good Villari and the charming Mrs. Villari; but there was no chance then to ask him to sing Nora McCarty. He ’s a dear man, and there ’ll be a chance yet. He is in a delightful villa at Settignano, and says he has written more in the past four months than he could have done in two years at Hartford. Well! good-bye, dear old friend. Yours ever, Wm. James. To Henry James. Florence, Mar. 17, 1893. ... I don’t wonder that it seems strange to you that we should be leaving here just in the glory of the year. Your view of Italy is that of the tourist; and that is really the only way to enjoy any place. Ours is that of the resident in whom the sweet decay breathed in for six months has pro¬ duced a sort of physiological craving for a change to robuster air. One ends by craving one’s own more per¬ manent attitude, and a country whose language I can speak and where I can settle into my own necessary work (which has been awfully prevented here of late), without a guilty sense that I am neglecting the claims of pictures and monuments, is the better environment now. In short, Italy has well served its purpose by us and we shall be eternally grateful. But we have no farther use for it, and the spring is also beautiful in lands that will [be] fresher to our senses. There are moments when the Florentine de¬ bility becomes really hateful to one, and I don’t see how the Lorings and others can come and make their home with it. You have done the best thing, in putting yourself in the strongest milieu to be found on earth. But Italy is incom¬ parable as a refreshing refuge, and I am sorry that you are likely to lose it this year. . . .](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b31359620_0001_0382.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)
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