Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. - Irving Bernstein (essay date 1950)
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. - Irving Bernstein (essay date 1950)
Irving Bernstein (essay date 1950)
SOURCE: "The Conservative Mr. Justice Holmes," in The New England Quarterly, Vol. XXIII, No. 4, December, 1950, pp. 435-52.
[In the following essay, Bernstein argues that Holmes's social and political philosophy were not ideologically liberal, but that Holmes was actually a classical conservative.]
A cherished American myth is that Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., was a liberal. This notion, as baseless as the tale of Washington and the cherry tree, was born during the great jurist's life and persists in the national folklore since his death. Walton Hamilton wrote in 1941, "It has taken a decade to elevate . . . Holmes from deity to mortality."1 The time has come to lay the ghost of "Holmes and Brandeis dissenting."
Holmes, in fact, was as profound, as civilized, and as articulate a conservative as the United States has produced. Although he eludes the neatly wrapped and labelled package,...
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Criticism
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (essay date 1896)
- H. L. Mencken (essay date 1930)
- Felix Frankfurter (essay date 1938)
- Daniel J. Boorstin (essay date 1941)
- John A. Garraty (essay date 1949)
- Irving Bernstein (essay date 1950)
- Mark DeWolfe Howe (essay date 1951)
- Saul K. Padover (essay date 1960)
- Francis Biddle (essay date 1961)
- Edmund Wilson (essay date 1962)
- G. Edward White (essay date 1971)
- G. Edward White (essay date 1976)
- Louis Auchincloss (essay date 1979)
- David H. Burton (essay date 1979)
- David H. Burton (essay date 1980)
- G. Edward White (essay date 1994)
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