Mortal Coils
Mortal Coils is a collection of five short fictional pieces written by Aldous Huxley in 1922.
The title uses a phrase from Hamlet, Act 3, Scene 1:
- ... To die, to sleep,
- To sleep, perchance to dream; aye, there's the rub,
- For in that sleep of death, what dreams may come,
- When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
- Must give us pause ...
The stories all concern themselves with some sort of trouble, normally of an amorous nature, and often ending with disappointment.
The stories
- "The Gioconda Smile" is a short murder-mystery story,[1] which Huxley later adapted into a 1947 film called A Woman's Vengeance.[2][3]
- "Permutations Among the Nightingales" is a play concerning the amorous problems encountered by various patrons of a certain establishment.
- "The Tillotson Banquet" tells of an old artist who was thought to be dead, and is "rediscovered", and an honorary dinner that is organised for him.
- "Green Tunnels" is about the boredom of a young girl on holiday with her family. She develops a romantic fantasy, and is ultimately disillusioned.
- "Nuns at Luncheon" is a second-hand story told of a nun falling in love. The story mocks the writer's process, a concept Huxley used in his novel Crome Yellow.
References
|
|
Novels |
|
|
Short stories |
|
|
Short story collections |
|
|
Poetry |
- The Burning Wheel (1916)
- Jonah (1917)
- The Defeat of Youth (1918)
- Leda (1920)
- Arabia Infelix (1929)
- The Cicadias and Other Poems (1931)
- Collected Poetry (1971)
|
|
Travel writing |
|
|
Essay collections |
|
|
Screenplays |
|
|
Non-fiction |
|
|
Plays |
- The Discovery (based on Frances Sheridan) (1924)
- The World of Light (1931)
- The Gioconda Smile (play version, also known as Mortal Coils) (1948)
- The Genius and the Goddess (play version, with Betty Wendel) (1957)
- The Ambassador of Captripedia (1965)
- Now More Than Ever (1997)
|
|
Children's books |
|
|
Other books |
|
|