Works
- The Criminal (1890)
- The New Spirit (1890)
- The Nationalisation of Health (1892)
- Man and Woman: A Study of Secondary and Tertiary Sexual Characteristics (1894) (revised 1929)
- translator: Germinal (by Zola) (1895) (reissued 1933)
- Sexual Inversion (1897) (with J.A. Symonds)
- Affirmations (1898)
- The Evolution of Modesty, The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity, Auto-Erotism (1900)
- The Nineteenth Century (1900)
- Analysis of the Sexual Impulse, Love and Pain, The Sexual Impulse in Women (1903)
- A Study of British Genius (1904)
- Sexual Selection in Man (1905)
- Erotic Symbolism, The Mechanism of Detumescence, The Psychic State in Pregnancy (1906)
- The Soul of Spain (1908)
- Sex in Relation to Society (1910)
- The Problem of Race-Regeneration (1911)
- The World of Dreams (1911)
- The Task of Social Hygiene (1912)
- Impressions and Comments (1914–1924) (3 vols.)
- Essays in War-Time (1916)
- The Philosophy of Conflict (1919)
- On Life and Sex: Essays of Love and Virtue (1921)
- Kanga Creek: An Australian Idyll (1922)
- Little Essays of Love and Virtue (1922)
- The Dance of Life (1923)
- Sonnets, with Folk Songs from the Spanish (1925)
- Eonism and Other Supplementary Studies (1928)
- The Art of Life (1929) (selected and arranged by Mrs. S. Herbert)
- More Essays of Love and Virtue (1931)
- ed.: James Hinton: Life in Nature (1931)
- Views and Reviews (1932)
- Psychology of Sex (1933)
- ed.: Imaginary Conversations and Poems: A Selection, by Walter Savage Landor (1933)
- Chapman (1934)
- My Confessional (1934)
- Questions of Our Day (1934)
- From Rousseau to Proust (1935)
- Selected Essays (1936)
- Poems (1937) (selected by John Gawsworth; pseudonym of T. Fytton Armstrong)
- Love and Marriage (1938) (with others)
- My Life (1939)
- Sex Compatibility in Marriage (1939)
- From Marlowe to Shaw (1950) (ed. by J. Gawsworth)
- The Genius of Europe (1950)
- Sex and Marriage (1951) (ed. by J. Gawsworth)
- The Unpublished Letters of Havelock Ellis to Joseph Ishill (1954)
Read more about this topic: Havelock Ellis
Famous quotes containing the word works:
“It is the art of mankind to polish the world, and every one who works is scrubbing in some part.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“They commonly celebrate those beaches only which have a hotel on them, not those which have a humane house alone. But I wished to see that seashore where mans works are wrecks; to put up at the true Atlantic House, where the ocean is land-lord as well as sea-lord, and comes ashore without a wharf for the landing; where the crumbling land is the only invalid, or at best is but dry land, and that is all you can say of it.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“The appetite of workers works for them; their hunger urges them on.”
—Bible: Hebrew, Proverbs 16:26.