Complete essays

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Aldous Huxley Complete Essays Series

Complete Essays, Vol. I: 1920-1925

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Complete Essays, Vol. III: 1930-1935

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Complete Essays, Vol. IV: 1936-1938

Shelve Complete Essays, Vol. IV: 1936-1938

Complete Essays, Vol. V: 1939-1956

Shelve Complete Essays, Vol. V: 1939-1956

Complete Essays, Vol. VI: 1956-1963

Shelve Complete Essays, Vol. VI: 1956-1963

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Collected Essays, by Aldous Huxley

When people told me I was clever to console me when I was growing up, I would add, sotto voce , to myself, sourly, “Like Aldous Huxley, I suppose.” He somehow summed up the word clever for me, filled it out in more directions than one could imagine, almost than one could believe, and yet did not overflow it. And nobody, I thought, wanted to be like that.

And I have discovered since that he fills this same role, of “the clever man,” for lots of other people. It is not only that he knows such a lot, about painting and music, art and nature, statistics and philosophies, mysticism and mescalin. It is not only that he writes about all these things so unfailingly well; the challenging first sentence, the clarity of construction, the richness and precision of the diction, the brilliant pacing of paragraph and essay. The really dazzling thing is that he has felt everything, experienced everything, and can give you a quick run-down on the act of love with a great courtesan, or the opening of a rose at dawn when your best friend died last night.

At the same time one cannot escape, while reading him, the recurrent, quite spontaneous reflection, “This is all mentally known, purely mental ; there should be so much more to life than this.” One has a sense, constantly, of running aground, quite grittily, on the conscious analysis and conscious assimilation of whatever experience it may be. This is of course most drastically and damagingly true of his creative writing (he is now the author of forty-five books, including ten novels and six volumes of short stories) but it mars even this collection of essays, which represents him at his best. You get an almost physical sense of power and speed and scope as you pass from “In a Tunisian Oasis” to “Variations on a Baroque Tomb” to “Landscape Painting as a Vision-Inducing Art” to “Drugs that Shape Men’s Minds”; forty-seven brilliant pieces of writing, truly intelligent and incredibly well informed. But every other time you turn a page you say, “But it’s so limitedly mental.”

Why should we feel this so much more with him than we do with, say, his grandfather, T H. Huxley, or his brother, Julian Huxley, or even Lytton Strachey or Bertrand Russell, people who have limited themselves much more completely? Partly, I suppose, because Aldous has not accepted his limitations, because he has exposed his sensibility to every possible mode of experience. In fact, he has deliberately sought out those modes of experience to dwell on longest which most resist rational assimilation, the religious, the aesthetic, the sexual. And he has done this not with any ambition of extending the empire of pure mind, but rather with the desire to see it defeated and humiliated. D. H. Lawrence once wrote to Richard Aldington that he, Aldington, and Huxley, were alike in that what they both most deeply wanted was to be raped; I think one can see what he meant reflected in this active seeking out of, but passive self-presentation to, self-subjugation to, “experience.”

Could one perhaps say, in fuller answer, that he has chosen the philosophies most fatally unadapted to his temperament? He has most consistently been, throughout his changing career, an irrationalist. In 1929, “It is life itself; and I, for one, have more confidence in the rightness of life than in that of any individual man, even if the man be Pascal.” And in 1956, “For, after all, Love is the last word”; this feeling we have when reading him, that mentality is not enough, that mental experience is not real experience, is an irrationalist’s feeling. In other words, it is Huxley himself who is inciting us all the time to that spontaneous and deadly criticism.

It is possible, I suppose, to dismiss this as masochism, as a desire to aggravate his own humiliation. But I wonder if it isn’t as much the result of his strength, of a stubborn fidelity to the best as he saw it. He grew up, after all, through the Great War and after, when, especially in England, the life-worshippers were completely routed. From 1880 on, with Whitman, Bergson, Nietzsche, the deification of multifarious, amoral Life had been a powerful international movement; in the pre-1914 novels of E. M. Forster and H. G. Wells, and the acclaim that greeted Sons and Lovers , you can see the general expectation of more life, more freedom, more beauty, more passion, more sunlight, for everyone in England, But with 1918 and Eminent Victorians , and 1919 and The Economic Consequences of the Peace , a much more ironic, self-conscious, selective, “civilized” mode of sensibility took over. A much more limited expectation of happiness, a much less enthusiastic approach to experience; life-worship became unfashionable. Aldous Huxley obviously fitted in, by personal temperament, with that new cynical self-consciousness, but he continued to believe in the earlier, more enthusiastic attitude as the theoretical best.

This comes out most strikingly in his relationship to D. H. Lawrence. “Of most other eminent men I have met I feel that at any rate I belong to the same species as they do. But this man has something different and superior in kind, not degree.” His whole essay on Lawrence is not only one of the finest things in the book, it is one of the finest things on Lawrence there is. And not, let us note, primarily for its intellectual power, but for its dignity and generosity and fullness of response. Writing about Lawrence, by people who had known him personally, is almost universally marred, at one level or another, by a quite ugly effort at self-defense, or revenge, or sheer destruction. Huxley almost alone records the impact and challenge with humility, with enthusiasm, with generosity. Not so much with intellectual understanding; what he says of their arguments about science seems to show Lawrence dancing ahead, out of Huxley’s reach. But Huxley almost alone gave a moved and moving human response to the total human phenomenon.

The others, Bertrand Russell, Lytton Strachey, Virginia Woolf, excluded Lawrence from consideration, because he could not be fitted into the scheme of life which they had constructed for their comfort. Huxley has constructed no such schemes. In consequence, he has known very little comfort. But he has achieved a movingly naked purity, within his limits, and he has moments of a humanity which transcend not only his own limitations but theirs too.

_____________

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5. Preface to The Collected Essays of Aldous Huxley (1960)

From the book essays on the essay film.

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Essays on the Essay Film

Chapters in this book (33)

The Marginalian

Aldous Huxley on Freedom, Propaganda, and the Future of Technology: A Rare and Prophetic 1958 Interview by Mike Wallace

By maria popova.

Aldous Huxley (July 26, 1894–November 22, 1963) — author of the classic Brave New World , little-known children’s book wordsmith , staple of Carl Sagan’s reading list — would have been 118 today. To celebrate his mind and his legacy, here is a rare 1958 conversation with Mike Wallace — the same masterful interviewer who also offered rare glimpses into the minds of Salvador Dalí and Ayn Rand — in which Huxley predicts the “fictional world of horror” depicted in Brave New World is just around the corner for humanity. He explains how overpopulation is among the greatest threats to our freedom, admonishes against the effects of advertising on children, and, more than half a century before Occupy Wall Street, outlines how global economic destabilization will incite widespread social unrest.

It’s extremely important, here and now, to start thinking about these problems — not to let ourselves be taken by surprise by the new advances of technology. […] We can foresee, and we can do a great deal to forestall. After all, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance.

Wallace reads a passage on American political campaigns from Huxley’s Brave New World Revisted (originally written under the title Enemies of Freedom ) that rings with remarkable, and remarkably unsettling, timeliness:

All that is needed is money and a candidate who can be coached to look sincere; political principles and plans for specific action have come to lose most of their importance. The personality of the candidate, the way he is projected by the advertising experts, are the things that really matter.

Complement with Huxley on drugs, democracy, and religion , then revisit his little-known children’s book .

— Published July 26, 2012 — https://www.themarginalian.org/2012/07/26/aldous-huxley-mike-wallace-1958-interview/ —

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COMMENTS

  1. 205p Aldous Huxley Collected Essays

    205p Aldous Huxley Collected Essays. Huxley´s grandfather is known as Darwin´s Bulldog and the grandson never failed to put the emphasis on the natural prerequisites of human activities. His vision of eternal slavery was not torture or prison but bounty and bliss, no consumer society has yet delivered (but we are getting close).

  2. The Project Gutenberg Works of Aldous Huxley

    The Project Gutenberg EBook of Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Aldous Huxley, by Aldous Huxley This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. ... See paragraph 1.E below. 1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ...

  3. On the Margin: Notes and Essays by Aldous Huxley

    About this eBook. Author. Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963. LoC No. 23010374. Title. On the Margin: Notes and Essays. Contents. Centenaries -- On re-reading 'Candide' -- Accidie -- Subject-matter of poetry -- Water music -- Pleasures -- Modern folk poetry -- Bibliophily -- Democratic art -- Accumulations -- On deviating into sense -- Polite ...

  4. Complete essays by Aldous Huxley

    Aldous Huxley complete essays. Classifications Dewey Decimal Class 824/.912 Library of Congress PR6015.U9 A6 2000, PR6015.U9A6 2000 The Physical Object Pagination 6 v. : Number of pages 510 ID Numbers ... Other projects include the Wayback Machine, archive.org and archive-it.org.

  5. Collected Essays

    Aldous Huxley was born on July 26, 1894, in Surrey, England, into a distinguished scientific and literary family; his grandfather was the noted scientist and writer, T.H. Huxley. Following an eye illness at age 16 that resulted in near-blindness, Huxley abandoned hope of a career in medicine and turned instead to literature, attending Oxford ...

  6. Aldous Huxley

    Aldous Leonard Huxley (/ ˈ ɔː l d ə s / AWL-dəs; 26 July 1894 - 22 November 1963) was an English writer and philosopher. His bibliography spans nearly 50 books, including novels and non-fiction works, as well as essays, narratives, and poems. Born into the prominent Huxley family, he graduated from Balliol College, Oxford, with an undergraduate degree in English literature.

  7. Books by Huxley, Aldous (sorted by popularity)

    On the Margin: Notes and Essays Aldous Huxley 270 downloads; Limbo Aldous Huxley 210 downloads; Antic Hay Aldous Huxley 205 downloads; ... Little Mexican & Other Stories Aldous Huxley 106 downloads; A Virgin Heart: A Novel Remy de Gourmont 86 downloads; Jonah Aldous Huxley 85 downloads;

  8. Complete Essays: 1926-1929

    At their best, Huxley's essays stand among the finest examples of the genre in modern literature. From 1938 to 1956 Aldous Huxley continues to explore the role of science and technology in modern culture, and seeks a final level of foundational Truth that might provide the basis for his growing interest in religious mysticism. It is in this period that his philosophy of history took its final ...

  9. Complete Essays: 1920-1925

    Complete Essays: 1920-1925. These first two volumes of a projected five, in preparation for several years, begin a major publishing venture, collecting the complete essays of one of the giants of modern English prose and of social commentary in our time. The first two volumes span the most productive period of Huxley's career.

  10. Aldous Huxley bibliography

    The following bibliography of Aldous Huxley provides a chronological list of the published works of English writer Aldous Huxley (1894-1963). It includes his fiction and non-fiction, both published during his lifetime and posthumously. ... Huxley and God: Essays (1991), essays published in the magazine Vedanta and the West between 1941 and ...

  11. Complete Essays: 1930-1935

    Complete Essays: 1930-1935. "Over his lifetime from 1894 to 1963, Aldous Huxley earned a reputation as one of the giants of modern English prose and of social commentary in our time. Best known for his novels, including Brave New World and Point Counter Point, Huxley was nonetheless very much at home in the essay form.

  12. Aldous Huxley Complete Essays Series

    Aldous Huxley Complete Essays Series. These six volumes collect the complete essays of one of the giants of modern English prose and of social commentary in our time. At their best, Huxley's essays stand among the finest examples of the genre in modern literature. "His place in English literature is unique and is certainly assured."-T.S.Eliot.

  13. Aldous Huxley Papers

    This collection contains signed letters and manuscripts written by Aldous Huxley between 1916 and 1963. The bulk of the letters were sent to Huxley's friend Robert Nichols, an English poet and dramatist, between 1916 and 1935. The manuscripts included are for the novel Antic Hay, the essay "America and the Future," the book Arabia Infelix and ...

  14. Collected essays : Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963

    Collected essays by Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963. Publication date 1959 Publisher New York, Harper Collection inlibrary; printdisabled; internetarchivebooks Contributor Internet Archive Language ... [email protected];[email protected] Republisher_time 1170 Scandate 20171230100055 Scanner ttscribe25.hongkong ...

  15. On the Margin: Notes and Essays, by Aldous Huxley

    Title:: On the Margin: Notes and Essays: Author:: Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963: Note: New York: G. H. Doran Co., c1923 : Link: Gutenberg text: Stable link here:

  16. Collected Essays, by Aldous Huxley

    Collected Essays. by Aldous Huxley. Harper and Brothers. 399 pp. $5.00. When people told me I was clever to console me when I was growing up, I would add, sotto voce, to myself, sourly, "Like Aldous Huxley, I suppose.". He somehow summed up the word clever for me, filled it out in more directions than one could imagine, almost than one ...

  17. Complete essays : Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963

    Complete essays by Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963. Publication date 2000 Publisher Chicago : I.R. Dee Collection inlibrary; printdisabled; trent_university; internetarchivebooks Contributor ... [email protected] Republisher_time 852 Scandate 20190828065457 Scanner station19.cebu.archive.org Scanningcenter cebu ...

  18. 5. Preface to The Collected Essays of Aldous Huxley (1960)

    Huxley, Aldous. "5. Preface to The Collected Essays of Aldous Huxley (1960)" In Essays on the Essay Film edited by Nora M. Alter and Timothy Corrigan, 83-86. New York Chichester, West Sussex: Columbia University Press, 2017.

  19. Aldous Huxley on Freedom, Propaganda, and the Future of Technology: A

    Aldous Huxley (July 26, 1894-November 22, 1963) — author of the classic Brave New World, little-known children's book wordsmith, staple of Carl Sagan's reading list — would have been 118 today. To celebrate his mind and his legacy, here is a rare 1958 conversation with Mike Wallace — the same masterful interviewer who also offered rare glimpses into the minds of Salvador Dalí and ...