Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Huxley, Aldous - Henry Hazlitt (review date 1930)
Huxley, Aldous - Henry Hazlitt (review date 1930)
Henry Hazlitt (review date 1930)
SOURCE: “This Petty Pace,” in The Nation (New York), Vol. 130, No. 3387, June 4, 1930, p. 654.
[In the following review of Brief Candles, Hazlitt argues that Huxley brings a message to his stories—that if one tries to be superhuman, one becomes subhuman.]
After half a dozen volumes Aldous Huxley has returned to the short story, but he does not bring his old irresponsibility with him. He has acquired a Message, and he insists that we shall hear it. It is the same message that raised its head in nearly every one of the essays in “Do What You Will,” to wit, that if one tries to be superhuman one ends by being subhuman, that the best way of turning a child into a devil is to try to bring it up as an angel. Against the ideal of superhumanness he pleads for the ideal of perfected humanity. Mr. Huxley's, in other words, is just another brand of humanism. But it is at the farthest pole from...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Herbert S. Gorman (review date 1920)
- Virginia Woolf (review date 1920)
- William Jacob Cuppy (review date 1922)
- Times Literary Supplement (review date 1924)
- Arnold Bennett (essay date 1924)
- L. P. Hartley (review date 1926)
- Joseph Wood Krutch (review date 1926)
- Henry Hazlitt (review date 1930)
- Kenneth Payson Kempton (essay date 1953)
- P. H. Newby (review date 1957)
- V. S. Pritchett (review date 1957)
- Arthur F. Beringause (essay date 1964)
- Charles M. Holmes (essay date 1970)
- Donald J. Watt (essay date 1970)
- Maria Schubert (essay date 1984)
- Further Reading
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