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¡°The Forty-Year-Old Traveler¡± is a short story by Theodore Dreiser, an American novelist and journalist best known for works such as ¡°An American Tragedy, Sister Carrie,¡± and was published in 1933. Dreiser's writing often explores themes of social inequality, the American dream, and the complexities of human nature.
In ¡°The Traveler at Forty,¡± Dreiser tells the story of a man in his 40s who sets out on a journey in search of the elusive and profound. As he travels to various landscapes and meets various people, he reflects on his life, choices, and meaning of existence. Stories can explore themes such as midlife crisis, self-discovery, and the pursuit of achievement.
Dreiser was known for his realistic portrayals of characters and situations, and "The Traveler at Forty" provides a deep exploration of the human mind and the existential questions that plague many individuals at various stages of their lives.

Summary
I have just turned forty. I have seen a little something of life. I have been a newspaper man, editor, magazine contributor, author and, before these things, several odd kinds of clerk before I found out what I could do.
Eleven years ago I wrote my first novel, which was issued by a New York publisher and suppressed by him, Heaven knows why. For, the same year they suppressed my book because of its alleged immoral tendencies, they published Zola¡¯s ¡°Fecundity¡± and ¡°An Englishwoman¡¯s Love Letters.¡±

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Contents
I. BARFLEUR TAKES ME IN HAND
II. MISS X.
III. AT FISHGUARD
IV. SERVANTS AND POLITENESS
V, THE RIDE TO LONDON
VI. THE BARFLEUR FAMILY
VII. A GLIMPSE OF LONDON
VIII. A LONDON DRAWING-ROOM
IX. CALLS
X. SOME MORE ABOUT LONDON
XI. THE THAMES
XII. MARLOWE
XIII. LILLY: A GIRL OF THE STREETS
XIV. LONDON; THE EAST END
XV. ENTER SIR SCORP
XVI. A CHRISTMAS CALL
XVII. SMOKY ENGLAND
XVIII. SMOKY ENGLAND (continued)
XIX. CANTERBURY
XX. EN ROUTE TO PARIS
XXI. PARIS!
XXII. A MORNING IN PARIS
XXIII. THREE GUIDES
XXIV. ¡°THE POISON FLOWER¡±
XXV. MONTE CARLO
XXVI. THE LURE OF GOLD!
XXVII. WE GO TO EZE
XXVIII. NICE
XXIX. A FIRST GLIMPSE OF ITALY
XXX. A STOP AT PISA
XXXI. FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF ROME
XXXII. MRS. Q. AND THE BORGIA FAMILY
XXXIII. THE ART OF SIGNOR TANNI
XXXIV. AN AUDIENCE AT THE VATICAN
XXXV. THE CITY OF ST. FRANCIS
XXXVI. PERUGIA
XXXVII. THE MAKERS OF FLORENCE
XXXVIII. A NIGHT RAMBLE IN FLORENCE
XXXIX. FLORENCE OF TO-DAY
XL. MARIA BASTIDA
XLI. VENICE
XLII. LUCERNE
XLIII. ENTERING GERMANY
XLIV. A MEDIEVAL TOWN
XLV. MY FATHER¡¯S BIRTHPLACE
XLVI. THE ARTISTIC TEMPERAMENT
XLVII. BERLIN
XLVIII. THE NIGHT-LIFE OF BERLIN
XLIX. ON THE WAY TO HOLLAND
L. AMSTERDAM
LI. ¡°SPOTLESS TOWN¡±
LII. PARIS AGAIN
LIII. THE VOYAGE HOME