W. Somerset Maugham (1874–1965) was a master storyteller known for his skill with plotting and conveying the nuance of relationships. Among his masterpieces, which included plays and short stories, are the novels Of Human Bondage (1915), The Painted Veil (1925), and The Razor’s Edge (1944). Although Maugham struggled early on, by 1904 he had four dramas running simultaneously in London, and he was once the world’s highest-paid author. Born at the British embassy in Paris, he was orphaned at ten and developed a stammer he never outgrew. Maugham lived in Cape Ferrat, France.

Romance of the Arts

A Novel Excerpt

by W. Somerset Maugham

I was very young when I wrote my first book. By a lucky chance it excited attention, and various persons sought my acquaintance.

It is not without melancholy that I wander among my recollections of the world of letters in London when first, bashful but eager, I was introduced to it. It is long since I frequented it, and if the novels that describe its present singularities are accurate much in it is now changed. The venue is different. Chelsea and Bloomsbury have taken the place of Hampstead, Notting Hill Gate, and High Street, Kensington. Then it was a distinction to be under forty, but now to be more than twenty-five is absurd. I think in those days we were a little shy of our emotions, and the fear of ridicule tempered the more obvious forms of pretentiousness. I do not believe that there was in that genteel Bohemia an intensive culture of chastity, but I do not remember so crude a promiscuity as seems to be practised in the present day. We did not think it hypocritical to draw over our vagaries the curtain of a decent silence. The spade was not invariably called a bloody shovel. Woman had not yet altogether come into her own.

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