Collection Summary
Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin
Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963
Aldous Huxley Collection
1915-1973
Manuscript Collection MS-02103
6 boxes (2.52 linear feet)
The Aldous Huxley materials date from
1915 to 1973 and include his manuscripts, proofs, contracts, and correspondence.
English
Biographical Sketch
Novelist Aldous Huxley was born July 26, 1894, in Godalming, Surrey, England, to
Leonard and Julia Huxley. He attended Eton College and hoped to become a doctor
until an eye infection left him blind for nearly eighteen months. After his eyesight
recovered enough, he went on to study at Balliol College, Oxford, where he received
his B.A. in English in 1916. However, his poor eyesight disqualified him from
serving in World War I and the medical profession. He worked as a schoolmaster at
Eton from 1917 to 1919, but from then on made a career from his writing. Besides
novels, essays, and short stories, he also produced poetry, travel writing, and
filmscripts.
Huxley married Maria Nys in 1919; they had one son, Matthew, who was born in 1920.
Huxley worked as an editor at the
Athenaeum and as a
drama critic for the Westminster Gazette from 1919
until 1924. Beginning in 1923, publishing contracts with Chatto & Windus
provided him with financial security.
Huxley published three volumes of poetry before publishing his first fiction,
Limbo (1920), a collection of short stories and one
play. His first two novels, Crome Yellow (1921) and
Antic Hay (1923), were social satires, as was
Point Counter Point (1928), one of his most
regarded works. These early novels struck a chord with the post-war generation, and
Huxley became a popular literary figure in England. Brave New
World, a broader satire of values in modern technological society, was
published in 1932 and brought him international recognition.
Huxley’s later writings, such as
Eyeless in Gaza
(1936), were more mystical and philosophical. After having lived in Italy during
much of the 1920s, the Huxleys, along with Gerald Heard, moved to California in
1937. There Huxley became interested in Hindu philosophy, parapsychology, and
mind-altering drugs. The Perennial Philosophy (1954)
discussed the ideas of the world’s great mystics. Huxley described his experiences
with hallucinogenic drug use in The Doors of
Perception (1954). In Literature and Science
(1963), he reflected on the relationship between the two disciplines. His later
novels Ape and Essence (1948), The Genius and the Goddess (1955), and Island (1962) were apologues and less successful due to their expository
style.
Maria Huxley died of cancer in 1955, and Huxley married Laura Archera in 1956. Aldous
Huxley died of cancer in Los Angeles, California, on November 22, 1963.
Index Terms
People
Allen, Rita.
Anthony, Joseph, 1912-1993.
Arányi, Jelly d', 1893-1966.
Bedford, Sybille, 1911-2006.
Brook, Clive, 1887-1974.
Carrington, Dora de Houghton,
1893-1932.
De Liagre, Alfred, 1904- .
Harper, Allanah,1904- .
Heard, Gerald, 1889-1971.
Herlitschka, Herberth E., 1893- .
Isherwood, Christopher, 1904-1986.
Loos, Anita, 1893-1981.
Neveux, Jeanne.
Pearson, Malcolm.
Robinson, G. Sidney.
Sackville-West, Edward, Hon.,
1901-1965.
Smith, Grover Cleveland, 1923- .
Wendel, Beth.
Organizations
Fosters' Agency Ltd.
J. B. Pinker and Sons.
William Morris Agency.
Subjects
Authors, English.
Document Types
Contracts.
Scope and Contents
Aldous Huxley materials date from 1915 to 1973 and include his manuscripts, proofs,
contracts, and correspondence. The materials are arranged in two series: I. Works
and Career-Related, 1929-1938, 1955, 1957, undated; and II. Correspondence,
1915-1973, undated. Series I is divided into two subseries, A. Works, 1929-1936,
undated; and B. Career-Related Material, 1931-1938, 1955, undated. This collection
was previously accessible through a card catalog, but has been re-cataloged as part
of a retrospective conversion project.
Huxley’s works are arranged alphabetically. Notable manuscripts include a bound
corrected typescript of
Brave New World, with
handwritten inserts; bound corrected page proofs of Eyeless
in Gaza, a corrected playscript with handwritten stage directions for
The Genius and the Goddess, and corrected
playscripts of Now More than Ever and The World of Light. Corrected typescripts, page proofs,
and galley proofs of many essays written for Nash’s Pall-Mall
Magazine are also present. Two bound volumes (Seventeen Essays and Sixty-two Short Essays) contain typescripts of essays, many with
corrections. Typescripts of various poems are also present. An index of works is
located at the end of this inventory.
Career-related materials include publishing contracts from 1931 to 1938 and a 1955
production contract for
The Genius and the Goddess,
as well as a typescript interview with corrections made by Huxley and a handwritten
questionnaire of interview questions with Huxley’s handwritten responses, both
undated.
Correspondence is primarily outgoing; notable letters include those to Jelly
d’Arányi, Alannah Harper, literary agents J. B. Pinker and Sons, Naomi Mitchison,
and Kethevan Hotinski Roberts. Correspondence relating to the playscript
The Genius and the Goddess includes letters with Rita
Allen, Joseph Anthony, co-author Beth Wendel, and the William Morris Agency, as well
as Wendel’s correspondence with Rita Allen, Courtney Burr, Frank Hauser, and
numerous others about the play and its production. Grover Smith edited a collection
of Huxley’s letters, Letters of Aldous Huxley (1969),
and letters to him from various individuals regarding Huxley are also present. A
complete list of correspondents may be found in the Index of Correspondents at the
end of this inventory.
Acquisition:
Purchases and gifts, 1964-1989 (R1205, R1364, R2260, R2382, R3324, R3599, R3732,
R4228, R4289, R4786, R6625, R6921, R11910)
Access:
Open for research
Processed by:
Katherine Mosley, 2006
Other manuscripts relating to Aldous Huxley at the Ransom Center may be found in the
Sybille Bedford, Judson Crews, Allanah Harper, Mary Hutchinson, Nicolas Nabokov,
James B. Pinker, Frederic Prokosch, Nancy Wilson Ross, Leonard Russell, Evelyn
Scott, Swami Vidyatmananda, and Mike Wallace papers.
Folder List
Series I. Works and Career-Related, 1929-1938, 1955, 1957,
undated
Subseries A. Works,
1929-1936, 1957, undated
1
1
Abroad in England,
corrected typescript and corrected page proofs for Nash’s Magazine, 1931, bound together.
With Sight-seeing in Alien
Englands
1
2
[Almeria (poem)],
handwritten manuscript, undated (see also Pagan Year, folder 4.11)
1
3
The Angry Ape, corrected
typescript, page layout, page proof, and galley proof for Nash’s Magazine, 1931, all bound
together. With unbound duplicate galley proof and page proof
1
4
Beyond the Mexique Bay,
bound corrected typescript, [1934]
1
5
[Blurb for Karin Leyden paintings], facsimile of handwritten
manuscript on printed invitation to Leicester Galleries exhibition,
undated
1
Brave New World
1
6
Corrected typescript with handwritten inserts, bound in
three volumes, undated
2
1
Corrected typescript (continued)
2
2
Bound corrected proofs, 1932
2
3
Bullfights, corrected
typescript titled Bullfights and
Democracy, page layout, page proof, and galley proof for
Nash’s Magazine, 1932, all bound
together. With unbound duplicate page proof
2
Christ and the Present
Crisis--see If Christ Should
Come [Today!]
2
4
The Cult of the
Infantile, corrected typescript and page proof from Nash’s Magazine, 1933, bound together.
With unbound duplicate page proof
2
5
The Cunning of the
Oriental, corrected typescript, page proof, and galley proof
for Nash’s Magazine, 1932, all bound
together. With unbound duplicate page proof
2
6
Drugs, corrected
typescript and galley proof for Nash’s
Magazine, 1931, bound together. With unbound duplicate
galley proof
3
Eyeless in Gaza
3
1
Bound corrected page proofs, undated. Bound with letter
from Huxley to E. C. M. Joad, 7 June 1936
3
2
Bound corrected page proofs, 1936
3
3
Forewarned Is Not
Forearmed, corrected typescript, page proof, and galley
proof for Nash’s Magazine, 1932, all
bound together
3
The Genius and the Goddess
(playscript by Huxley and Betty Wendel, based on Huxley’s novel)
3
4
Corrected typescript, with handwritten stage directions,
Oct.-Nov. 1957. With Jane Surrey’s resume, memorandum from
Huxley to Wendel, 24 Nov. 1957, and furniture and dressing plot,
15 Nov. 1957
3
5
Corrected typescript fragment, undated
3
6
Good Conversation,
corrected typescript, page proof, and galley proof for Nash’s Magazine, 1931, all bound
together
3
7
Greater and Lesser
London, corrected typescript, page layout, page proofs, and
galley proof fragment for Nash’s
Magazine, 1931, all bound together
3
8
Hyde Park on Sunday,
corrected typescript and layout page, [1931], bound together. With
unbound page proof for Nash’s
Magazine, 1931
4
1
If Christ Should Come
[Today!] [symposium contribution], corrected typescript
titled Christ and the Present
Crisis, page proof fragment, and galley proof fragment,
1932, all bound together. With typescripts by G. K. Chesterton, J.
B. S. Haldane, and Dean Inge
4
Jesting Pilate: The Diary of a
Journey
4
2
Corrected typescript, undated
4
3
Corrected typescript, with four typescript fragments,
undated
4
4
Joyce, the Artificer: Two Studies of
Joyce’s Method (with Stuart Gilbert), corrected
typescript foreword and corrected typescript, both undated
4
5
Love: A Fashion Forecast,
corrected typescript and galley proof for Nash’s Magazine, 1932, bound together. With unbound
duplicate galley proof
4
6
The Moor (After Seeing Paul
Robeson’s Performance of Othello) (poem), corrected
typescript, undated
4
7
The New Salvationism,
handwritten manuscript, undated
4
8-9
Now More Than Ever
(playscript), corrected typescript, undated
4
10
On Being the Right Size,
corrected typescript, page proof, and galley proof for Nash’s Magazine, 1932, all bound
together
4
11
Pagan Year (poem),
corrected typescript, with Almeria, undated
4
12
Perils of the Small Hours
(poem), typescript, with Return to an
Old Home, undated
4
13
The Rest Cure,
typescript, page proofs, and galley proofs, 1929, all bound together
4
14
Seventeen Essays, bound
handwritten and typescript essays, undated
4
*
Sight-seeing in Alien
Englands, corrected typescript, layout page, and page
proofs, all bound together (*bound with Abroad in England, folder 1.1)
5
1
[Sixty-two Short Essays]
A Collection of Typescripts of
Two-page Essays, bound typescripts, many with
corrections, undated
5
2
Texts and Pretexts: An Anthology with
Commentaries, bound incomplete corrected typescript,
[1932]
5
3
[What Is History?],
corrected typescript, undated
5
4
The World of Light: A Comedy in Three
Acts (playscript), bound corrected typescript, 1931
5
5
[Untitled article on slow movement of Beethoven’s Quartet in
A Minor used in dramatization of Point
Counter Point], handwritten manuscript, undated
5
6
[Untitled poem] Myrrhine, we have
often sung..., handwritten manuscript, undated
5
Subseries B. Career-Related,
1931-1938, 1955, undated
5
7
Contracts, 1931-1938, 1955
5
8
Interview, corrected typescript [by Louise Morgan for Everyman] with additional corrections by
Huxley, titled Aldous Huxley: Who Wrote
His First Novel in Complete Darkness, undated
5
9
Questionnaire, handwritten manuscript of questions [by Louise
Morgan for Everyman], with Huxley’s
handwritten responses, undated
Series II. Correspondence, 1915-1973, undated
5
10
A-Z, 1915-1963, undated
5
11
Arányi, Jelly d’, [1915]-1918, undated
5
12
Roberts, Kethevan Hotinski, 1930-1941, undated
5
13
Smith, Grover, 1948-1967
6
1
Titus, Edward W., 1929-1930
6
2-3
Wendel, Beth Betty, 1954-1973,
undated
6
4
Bound volume of letters, primarily to J. B. Pinker &
Sons, 1920-1934
Index of Correspondents
Box and folder numbers are followed by a number in parentheses which indicates the
number of items by that person. A single item is indicated where there is no number
in parentheses following the box and folder number. Where there is correspondence
from Aldous Huxley, the number in parentheses is followed by the phrase "from
Huxley." So in the example:
Doran, George H. (George Henry), 1869-1956--5.10 (2 from Huxley), 6.4
there are two letters from Huxley to Doran in box 5, folder 10, and one letter from
Doran to Huxley in box 6, folder 4.
- Ably, Jean, b. 1889--6.4 (with note from Huxley)
- Aldington, Richard, 1892-1962--5.10 (2 from Huxley, re.
D. H. Lawrence)
- Allen, Rita--5.10 (2), 6.2 (9 to Beth Wendel, 2 from
Wendel)
- American Arbitration Association--6.3 (to Weissberger
& Frosch)
- Anthony, Joseph, 1912-1993--5.10 (2)
- Arányi, Jelly d’, 1893-1966--5.11 (23 from Huxley)
- Arzner, Dorothy, 1900-1979--6.2 (2)
- Bagnold, Enid--5.13 (to Grover Smith)
- Barton, __--6.4 (from Huxley)
- Bedford, Sybille, 1911-2006--5.10 (from Huxley), 6.2 (2
to Beth Wendel)
- Bernhard Tauchnitz Verlag (Curt Otto)--6.4 (to J. B.
Pinker and Sons)
- Bookman’s Journal--5.10 (from Huxley)
- British Broadcasting Company (Michael Barry)--6.2 (to
Fosters’ Agency)
- Brook, Clive, 1887-1974--6.2 (11 to Beth Wendel, 3 from
Wendel)
- Burr, Courtney--6.2 (3 to Beth Wendel, 1 from Wendel),
6.3 (5 from Weissberger & Frosch, 2 from William Morris Agency)
- Carpentier, Pierre--6.4 (to J. B. Pinker and Sons)
- Carrington, Dora de Houghton, 1893-1932--5.10 (5 from
Huxley)
- Chatto & Windus (Firm) (C. H. C. Prentice)--6.4
(1 to Eric Pinker, 2 to J. Ralph Pinker)
- Christopher Mann Management Ltd. (Aubrey Blackburn)--6.2
(to Alfred De Liagre)
- Clark, G. N. (George Norman), Sir, 1890- --5.13 (to
Grover Smith)
- Clark, Kenneth, Sir--5.13 (to Grover Smith)
- Constable (Firm) (Michael Sadleir)--6.4 (1 to Huxley, 1
to Eric Pinker)
- Cummings, Constance, 1910- --6.2 (to Beth Wendel)
- De Liagre, Alfred, 1904- (Delly)--6.2 (9 to Beth Wendel, 6 from Wendel, 1 from
Christopher Mann Management Ltd.)
- Doran, George H. (George Henry), 1869-1956--5.10 (2 from
Huxley), 6.4
- Dramatists Guild (Justin Menus, Mills Ten Eyck, Jr.)--6.3
(2 from Weissberger & Frosch)
- Dyson, __-- 6.4 (from Huxley)
- Forster, E. M. (Edward Morgan), 1879-1970--5.13 (to
Grover Smith)
- Fosters’ Agency Ltd. (Max Kester, Gladys Toyne)--6.2 (19
to Beth Wendel, 4 from Wendel, 11 to William Morris Agency)
- Fountain Press (James R. Wells)--6.4 (to J. Ralph Pinker)
- Gallup, __--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Gillman, Elias--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Gottlieb, Morton--6.3 (also from Albert Seldon, to Beth
Wendel)
- Graves, Robert, 1895-1985--5.13 (to Grover Smith)
- H. M. Tennent Ltd. (Hugh Beaumont)--6.2 (2 to Beth
Wendel)
- Harper, Allanah, 1904- --5.10 (from Huxley)
- Hartley, L. P. (Leslie Poles), 1895-1972--5.13 (to Grover
Smith)
- Hauser, Frank, 1922- --see Meadow Players Limited
- Heard, Gerald, 1889-1971--5.13 (to Grover Smith)
- Herlitschka, Herberth E., 1893- --6.2 (to Beth Wendel),
6.4
- Houseman, John--6.2 (to Beth Wendel)
- Huxley, Julian, 1887-1975--6.4 (to unidentified
recipient)
- Isherwood, Christopher, 1904-1986--5.13 (to Grover Smith)
- J. B. Pinker and Sons (Eric Pinker, J. Ralph Pinker, F.
L. Wicken)--6.4 (1 from Pierre Carpentier, 3 from Chatto & Windus, 1
from Constable (Firm), 1 from Fountain Press, 289 from Huxley, 1 from Melantrich
(Firm), 1 from Nash’s Magazine, 1 from New York American, 1 from Bernhard Tauchnitz Verlag)
- Jackson, W.--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Joad, C. E. M. (Cyril Edwin Mitchinson), 1891-1953--3.1
(from Huxley)
- Koestler, Arthur, 1905-1983--5.13 (2 to Grover Smith)
- Knebel, Herbert A.--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Knight, __--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Loos, Anita, 1893-1981--6.2 (5 to Beth Wendel)
- Mainbocher, 1891-1976--6.3 (4 to Beth Wendel)
- Meadow Players Limited (Frank Hauser)--6.3 (10 to Beth
Wendel)
- Melantrich (Firm)--6.4 (to J. B. Pinker and Sons)
- Mitchison, Naomi, 1897- --5.10 (2 from Huxley)
- Moeller, Philip, 1880-1958--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Monro, Harold, 1879-1932--5.10 (3 from Huxley)
- Morgan, Louise--5.10 (2 from Huxley)
- Nash’s Magazine (E. Atkins)--6.4 (to J. B.
Pinker and Sons)
- Neveux, Jeanne--6.3 (5 to Beth Wendel, 1 from Wendel)
- New York American (Earl Conteau)--6.4 (to J. B.
Pinker and Sons)
- Pearson, Malcolm (Squire)--6.3 (2 to Beth Wendel)
- Rangoolam, S.--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Roberts, F. Warren--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Roberts, Kethevan Hotinski--5.12 (20 from Huxley)
- Robinson, G. Sidney--5.10 (3 from Huxley)
- Rose, Ralph--5.10 (10 from Huxley)
- Russell, Bertrand, 1872-1970--5.13 (to Grover Smith re.
T. S. Eliot)
- S. Fischer Verlag (Dr. Bermann-Fischer, Stefani
Hunzinger)--6.3 (from Beth Wendel, to Wendel)
- Sackville-West, Edward, Hon., 1901-1965--5.13 (2 to
Grover Smith)
- Sagan, __--6.4 (from Huxley)
- Secker & Warburg (Martin Secker)--6.4 (to Chatto
& Windus)
- Selden, Albert--6.3 (to Wendel, also from Morton
Gottlieb)
- Smith, Grover Cleveland, 1923- --5.13 (1 from G. N.
Clark, 1 from Kenneth Clark, 1 from E. M. Forster, 1 from Robert Graves, 1 from
L. P. Hartley, 1 from Gerald Heard, 1 from Huxley, 1 from Christopher Isherwood,
2 from Arthur Koestler, 1 from Bertrand Russell, 2 from Edward Sackville-West, 1
from Alix Strachey, 1 from James Strachey), 6.3 (from Beth Wendel)
- Sokal, H. R. (Henry R.)--6.2 (3 to Fosters’ Agency, 1
from Fosters’ Agency)
- Squire, John Collings, Sir, 1884-1958--5.10 (from Huxley)
- Strachey, Alix, 1892-1973--5.13 (to Grover Smith)
- Strachey, James--5.13 (to Grover Smith)
- Strachey, Lytton, 1880-1932--5.10 (5 from Huxley)
- Tábori, Paul, 1908- --6.4
- Theis, __--5.10 (2 from Huxley)
- Titus, Edward W., b. 1880--6.1 (3 from Huxley, 4 to Huxley, 1 to Madame
Lawrence)
- Weissberger & Frosch (Arnold Weissberger)--6.3 (5
to Courtney Burr, 5 to Huxley, 5 to Beth Wendel, 2 from Wendel, 2 from William
Morris Agency)
- Wendel, Beth Betty--5.10 (2 from Rita Allen to Huxley and Wendel, 12 from
William Morris Agency to Huxley and Wendel), 6.2 (9 from Rita Allen, 2 to Rita
Allen, 2 from Dorothy Arzner, 2 from Sybille Bedford, 11 from Clive Brook, 3 to
Clive Brook, 3 from Courtney Burr, 1 to Courtney Burr, 1 from Constance
Cummings, 9 from Alfred De Liagre, 6 to Alfred De Liagre, 19 from Fosters’
Agency, 4 to Fosters’ Agency, 2 from H. M. Tennent, 1 from Herberth E.
Herlitschka, 1 from John Houseman, 6 to Huxley, 3 from Huxley, 1 from Anita
Loos, 4 from Mainbocher, 10 from Meadow Players Limited, 5 from Jeanne Neveux, 1
to Jeanne Neveux, 2 from Malcolm Pearson, 1 from S. Fischer Verlag, 1 to S.
Fischer Verlag, 1 from Albert Selden and Morton Gottlieb, 1 from Grover Smith, 5
from Weissberger & Frosch, 2 to Weissberger & Frosch, 28 from
William Morris Agency, 7 to William Morris Agency)
- William Morris Agency (Sid Berkowitz, Helen Harvey, Alice
Jones, Alice N. Katz, Robert Youdelman)--5.10 (14), 6.2 (11 from Fosters’
Agency), 6.3 (2 to Courtney Burr, 2 to Weissberger & Frosch, 28 to Beth
Wendel, 7 from Beth Wendel)
- Unidentified--6.4 (to Huxley), 5.10 (2 from Huxley)
Index of Works
-
By Huxley
- Abroad in England--1.1, 4.14
- Abroad, Sweet Abroad--5.1
- Afternoon at Cholula, An--4.14
- Almeria (poem)--1.2, 4.11, 5.10
(Theis letter)
- Angry Ape, The--1.3
- Best Sellers--5.1
- Beyond the Mexique Bay--1.4
- Blurb for Karin Leyden paintings--1.5
- Books without End--5.1
- Brave New World--1.6, 2.1-2
- Bullfights--2.3
- By Fifties in a Cave--5.1
- Cars and Babies--5.1
- Cars, Trains, and Psychology--5.1
- Ceremonial--4.14
- Child as Artist, The--5.1
- Comfort--5.1
- Compulsion to Co-operate, The--5.1
- Conquest of Nature--5.1
- Country, The--4.14
- Cruelty--5.1
- Cult of the Infantile, The--2.4
- Cunning of the Oriental, The--2.5
- Dangers of Intelligence and the Dangers of
Emotion, The--5.1
- Declarations of Independence--5.1
- Decline of Speech, The--5.1
- Doctors and Doctoring--5.1
- Drugs--2.6
- Experiment in [with] Time,
An--4.14
- Eyeless in Gaza--3.1-2
- Fear--5.1
- Fiction and Fact--4.14
- Forewarned Is Not Forearmed--3.3
- Foreword to unidentified work--5.10 (Louise Morgan letter)
- Fruits of Education, The--5.1
- General Knowledge--5.1
- Genius and the Goddess, The
(play)--3.4-5
- German Bonfire--5.1
- Good conversation--3.6
- Greater and Lesser London--3.7
- Hundred Best Books, The--5.1
- Hyde Park on Sunday--3.8
- Ideas Are Infectious--5.1
- Idolatry--4.14
- If Christ Should Come
[Today!]--4.1
- Illegal Humor--5.1
- Importance of being Stupid,
The--5.1
- Insect’s-Eye View--5.1
- Jesting Pilate; The Diary of a
Journey--4.2-3
- Jonah and Politics--5.1
- Joyce the Artificer; Two Studies of
Joyce’s Method--4.4
- Leisure--5.1
- Love: A Fashion Forecast--4.5
- Machines That Matter--5.1
- Medical Fashions--5.1
- Mental Weather--4.14
- Modern Amusements--4.14
- Moor, The (After Seeing Paul Robeson’s
Performance of Othello)--4.6
- Music at Night--6.4 (extracts, p.
148)
- Music Industry, The--5.1
- New Salvationism, The--4.7
- Night Out, A--5.1
- Now More Than Ever--4.8-9
- Old Age in a Changing World--5.1
- On Being the Right Size--4.10
- On Living through History--5.1
- Pagan Year (poem)--4.11
- Pea-nuts and Landscape
Painters--5.1
- Pennyworths of Thought--4.14
- Perils of the Small Hours
(poem)--4.12
- Pistols and Puritans--5.1
- Pleasures of Dieting, The--5.1
- Political Murder--5.1
- Politics of Clothes, The--5.1
- Population and Politics--5.1
- Portoferraio--4.14
- Psychology of Unemployment--5.1
- Race Racket, The--5.1
- Racial History--5.1
- Rats--5.1
- Reality of Progress, The--5.1
- Reflections on the Derby--4.14
- Religion, Science, and Man--5.1
- Rest Cure, The--4.13
- Return to an Old Home--4.12
- Rules of the Game, The--4.14
- Scientific Attitude, The--5.1
- Seventeen Essays--4.14
- Sight-seeing in Alien
Englands--1.1
- Sixty-two Short Essays--5.1
- Something for Nothing--5.1
- Spiritual Engineering--5.1
- Spoken and the Written Word,
The--5.1
- Stimulants and Narcotics--5.1
- Strain of Modern Life, The--4.14
- Swindlers and Swindlees--5.1
- Synthetic Eloquence--5.1
- Talk Versus Print--5.1
- Telepathy and Clairvoyance--5.1
- Tempo--5.1
- Texts and Pretexts--5.2
- That Future--5.1
- Theory of Buses, A--5.1
- To Be or Not To Be--5.1
- Unending War, The--5.1
- Unscientific Spirit, The--5.1
- Untitled article on slow movement of Beethoven’s Quartet in A Minor used
in dramatization of Point Counter Point]--5.5
- Untitled poem Myrrhine, we have often
sung…--5.6
- Use of Catastrophes, The--5.1
- Views of Holland--4.14
- Wander-birds--4.14
- Water, Water Everywhere--5.1
- What Is History?--5.3
- Work and Leisure--4.14
- World of Light--5.4
-
By Other Authors
- Chesterton, G. K. (Gilbert Keith), 1874-1936. How Christ Would Solve Modern Problems If He
Were on Earth Today [contribution to symposium on If Christ Should Come Today]--4.1
- Gilbert, Stuart. Joyce the Artificer; Two
Studies of Joyce’s Method--4.4
- Haldane, J. B. S. (John Burdon Sanderson), 1892-1964. If Jesus… [contribution to symposium on
If Christ Should Come
Today]--4.4
- Inge, William Ralph, 1860-1954. [Contribution to symposium on If Christ Should Come Today]--4.4
- Krishnamurti, J. (Jiddu), 1895-1986. The
Dissolution of the Order of the Star--5.10 (unidentified
recipient)