Skip to main content

Box 1

 Container

Contains 3 Results:

Aldous Huxley papers

 Collection — Box: 1
Identifier: MSP 83
Scope and Contents

This collection contains three letters.  Two letters concern Huxley’s novel Island, and are addressed to L. Rust Hills, who was the fiction editor at Esquire magazine from 1956 until 1963. One letter concerns the clinical availability of LSD and references the pharmaceutical companies that were manufacturing LSD, mescaline, and psilocybin in 1961.

Dates: 1961

Two Letters to L. Rust Hills from Aldous Huxley, June - July 1961

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 1
Identifier: MSP 83, File 1
Scope and Contents These letters concern Huxley’s novel Island are addressed to L. Rust Hills, who was the fiction editor at Esquire magazine from 1956 until 1963. One letter, five pages, explains how Huxley’s house had recently been destroyed by fire. The letter also contains a summary of the novel’s plot and insights into the philosophies behind it. The other letter, a one-page note on blue air-mail paper, encourages L. Rust Hills to contact Mr. Cass Canfield at Harper Brothers for a manuscript of the novel....
Dates: June - July 1961

Letter to Langdon T. Williams, Junior, June 1961

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 2
Identifier: MSP 83, File 2
Scope and Contents

In this letter, Huxley answers a request for information about the clinical availability of hallucinogenic drugs for experimentation. The drugs include mescaline, LSD-25, and psilocybin, and the letters lists the pharmaceutical companies that were producing them at the time. The letter closes with a note about his own experimentation: "My own acquaintance with mescaline and LSD-25 has been mediated by research workers here and at Harvard." (Description provided by Bromer Booksellers.)

Dates: June 1961