Now More Than EverUniversity of Texas Press, 2000 - 123 էջ Over the course of his career, British writer Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) shifted away from elitist social satires and an atheistic outlook toward greater concern for the masses and the use of religious terms and imagery. This change in Huxley's thinking underlies the previously unpublished play Now More Than Ever. Written in 1932-1933 just after Brave New World, Now More Than Ever is a response to the social, economic, and political upheavals of its time. Huxley's protagonist is an idealistic financier whose grandiose schemes for controlling the means of production drive him to swindling and finally to suicide. His fate allows Huxley to expose the evils he perceives in free-market capitalism while pleading the case for national economic planning and the rationalization of Britain's industrial base. This volume contains the full text of Now More Than Ever, which was believed to be lost until 1976, when a copy was found at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center of the University of Texas at Austin. A "thinker's play" that has never been produced on stage, it is the last previously unpublished piece of Huxley's major writings and immensely important to understanding his development as a writer. The editors of this volume have annotated the play for contemporary readers. Their introduction sets the play in the context of Huxley's intellectual life. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 17–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
... one's neighbour even though one may have very little in common with him . I believe there's some way of learn- ing to love him . Through humility , perhaps . ( Pause ) . Queer , the way one finds oneself using religious language . But ...
... one's trying to help . That Christian insistence on love - I used to think it was all rather silly and sentimental . But I see now I was wrong . Loving one's neighbour is heroic . Heroic because it's so damn- ably difficult , the most ...
... one's a man , it's one's business to behave like a man . Not like a scared animal . Haven't you any pride , man ? SPENCE : ( Making a great effort to recover his self - control . ) I'm sorry , sorry . sir . I'm LIDGATE : A man's got his ...