Abstract
On December 31, 1877, the English novelist George Eliot made her last entry in the notebook in which she had kept her diary for the past 16 years. She was a few weeks past her 58th birthday; one year past the triumphant publication of Daniel Deronda, her last major work of fiction; and three years away from her death, from kidney disease, in December 1880. As she was accustomed to do, Eliot used the last day of the year to look reflectively in her diary at the big picture of her life as a whole: I have often been helped by looking back in [this book] to compare former with actual states of despondency from bad health or other apparent cause. In this way a past despondency has turned to a present hopefulness. But...