The Divine Within — Aldous Huxley

1 – The Minimum Working Hypothesis (1944)

2 – Seven Meditations (1943)

3 – Religion and Temperament (1943)

4 – Who Are We? (1955)

5 – The Philosophy of the Saints (1944)

6 – Religion and Time (1943)

7 – Some Reflections on Time (1946)

8 – On a Sentence from Shakespeare (1944)

9 – Man and Reality (1942)

10 – Reflections on Progress (1947)

11 – Further Reflections on Progress (1947)

12 – Substitutes for Liberation (1952)

13 – Reflections on the Lord’s Prayer–I (1942)

14 – Reflections on the Lord’s Prayer–II (1942)

15 – Reflections on the Lord’s Prayer–III (1942)

16 – Distractions–I (1941)

17 – Distractions–II (1941)

18 – Idolatry (1943)

19 – Action and Contemplation (1941)

20 – Knowledge and Understanding (1956)

21 – The Sixth Patriarch (1946)

22 – Notes on Zen (1947)

23 – The “Inanimate” Is Alive (1957)

24 – Readings in Mysticism (1942)

25 – Symbol and Immediate Experience (1960)

26 – Shakespeare and Religion (1964)

27 – The Yellow Mustard

28 – Lines

Aldous’ Page

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Complete Works of Aldous Huxley — Aldous Huxley

This is hardly “The Complete Works”.   See Aldous’ page for a more complete list.

The Novels

Crome Yellow
Antic Hay
Those Barren Leaves
Point Counter Point
Brave New World
Eyeless in Gaza
After Many a Summer
Time Must Have a Stop
Ape and Essence
The Genius and the Goddess
Island

The Translation

A Virgin Heart by Remy de Gourmont

The Shorter Fiction

Limbo
Mortal Coils
Little Mexican
Two or Three Graces
Brief Candles
Miscellaneous Short Stories

The Short Stories

List of Short Stories in Chronological Order
List of Short Stories in Alphabetical Order

The Poetry Collections

The Burning Wheel
The Defeat of Youth and Other Poems
Leda
The Cicadas and Other Poems

The Poems

List of Poems in Chronological Order
List of Poems in Alphabetical Order

Selected Non-Fiction

The Olive Tree and Other Essays
What are You Going to Do About it?
The Perennial Philosophy
Science, Liberty and Peace
The Devils of Loudun
The Doors of Perception
Heaven and Hell
Brave New World Revisited

The Memoir

The Art of Seeing

Aldous’ Page

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Collected Short Stories — Aldous Huxley

Happily Ever After

Eupompus Gave Splendour to Art by Numbers

One often gets the impression with Aldous that he liked to show off his classical education: “Oooh, hark at me, i know all these ancient Greek people and things.”

All the pompous whimsy aside, the only thing really being said here is Aldous didn’t much think that meditation was good for a person: “Let’s not count breaths, eh.”

Cynthia

A little romance short with Aldous stirring in another good load of the “Oooh, hark at me, i know all these ancient Greek people and things.” that we had in “Eupompus Gave Splendour to Art by Numbers”.

The Bookshop

A short about an impulse purchase all dressed up in a rather lovely piece of descriptive writing.   I felt that the undertones of this was Aldous bemoaning the great unwashed and uncultured, while, at the end, he sees that he can’t escape their influence when surrounded on all sides by them: we’re all in this shit life together.   Our protagonist finally throws his impulse purchase into some bushes.

I find this story very much to have the seed of what Aldous later grew into his life’s work.   The symbolism of the bookshop with its classical music, fashions, art and books; representing education, privilege and wealth; surrounded on all sides by the working classes, poverty and need.   How can one enjoy such fruits when he’s reminded and intruded upon, at every moment, that so many don’t have these things.

The Death of Lully

Lully is an early christian martyr that is rescued on a passing ship.   A well written short but i’m not sure what the message really is.   As a devout non-christian, this kind of thing just turns my brain off.

Sir Hercules

The Gioconda Smile

The Tillotson Banquet

Green Tunnels

Nuns at Luncheon

Little Mexican

Hubert and Minnie

Fard

The Portrait

Young Archimedes

Half Holiday

The Monocle

Fairy Godmother

Chawdron

The Rest Cure

The Claxtons

Aldous’ Page

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