
Brave New World
Chapter 13: Thirteen
by Huxley, AldousThe chapter opens with Lenina in the Embryo Store, visibly distressed and disengaged from her work. Henry Foster notices her unusual behavior and suggests medical interventions like a Pregnancy Substitute or V.P.S. treatment, but Lenina dismisses him irritably. Her thoughts reveal her preoccupation with John, the Savage, as she struggles to focus on her tasks, even accidentally neglecting an embryo’s injection. This oversight foreshadows a future tragedy, highlighting the consequences of her emotional turmoil in a world that prioritizes efficiency over humanity.
Lenina’s distress continues as she confides in Fanny, who dismisses her feelings as absurd and encourages her to move on or take soma to suppress her emotions. Fanny’s pragmatic advice reflects the societal norms of their world, where relationships are transient and emotions are chemically managed. However, Lenina’s persistent attachment to John challenges these norms, revealing her inner conflict between societal expectations and her genuine desires. Fanny eventually suggests a bold approach: to pursue John regardless of his feelings, but Lenina remains hesitant, intimidated by his unconventional behavior.
The scene shifts to John’s apartment, where Lenina arrives unexpectedly after taking soma to overcome her fears. John’s reaction is a mix of reverence and awkwardness, as he kneels and kisses her hand, quoting Shakespeare to express his love. However, his romantic idealism clashes with Lenina’s confusion and frustration. She struggles to understand his references to traditional courtship rituals, like hunting lions, which are meaningless in their technologically advanced society. Their miscommunication underscores the cultural divide between them.
The chapter culminates in a tense exchange as Lenina, exasperated by John’s cryptic words, demands clarity about his feelings. John’s declaration of love is overshadowed by his insistence on marriage, a concept Lenina finds horrifying. Their conversation devolves into mutual frustration, with Lenina unable to reconcile John’s archaic values with her own conditioned beliefs. The chapter ends on a cliffhanger, emphasizing the irreconcilable differences between their worlds and the emotional turmoil that arises from their clash of ideals.
FAQs
1. How does Lenina’s emotional state contrast with the societal norms of her world, and what does this reveal about her character?
Answer:
Lenina exhibits uncharacteristic sadness and weariness in this chapter, which starkly contrasts with the emotionally controlled, pleasure-seeking norms of the World State. While others like Henry Foster and Fanny encourage her to use soma or passion surrogates to suppress her feelings, Lenina persists in her longing for John, demonstrating a capacity for genuine emotion that defies her conditioning. Her distraction at work (forgetting an embryo’s injection) and resistance to casual relationships reveal a depth of feeling that makes her unique in this society. This internal conflict shows Lenina as a transitional figure between conditioned happiness and authentic human emotion.2. Analyze the significance of John’s references to Malpais rituals when courting Lenina. How does this cultural clash manifest in their interaction?
Answer:
John attempts to court Lenina through the rituals of his Malpais upbringing - mentioning lion skins, marriage promises, and acts of service - which creates profound misunderstanding. These references represent his values of earned love and permanent commitment, concepts foreign to Lenina’s world of instant gratification and non-exclusive relationships. The clash becomes most apparent when John speaks of sweeping floors to prove devotion while Lenina pragmatically mentions vacuum cleaners. This highlights the fundamental incompatibility between John’s romantic idealism (rooted in Shakespeare and tribal customs) and Lenina’s conditioned pragmatism, foreshadowing their doomed relationship.3. How does Huxley use hypnopaedic sayings and medical concepts in this chapter to critique World State society?
Answer:
Huxley satirizes the World State’s reduction of human experience through pseudo-medical solutions like Henry’s suggestion of a “Pregnancy Substitute” or “V.P.S. treatment” for Lenina’s emotions. The glib hypnopaedic saying “A doctor a day keeps the jim-jams away” demonstrates how the state medicalizes normal human feelings. These concepts critique a society that pathologizes authentic emotion while promoting chemical and technological solutions. The tragic result of Lenina’s distraction (the future death from sleeping sickness) further shows the dangers of this system - even essential medical care becomes unreliable when humans are emotionally unfulfilled.4. Compare Fanny’s advice to Lenina with modern dating attitudes. What does this reveal about the World State’s approach to relationships?
Answer:
Fanny’s advice to “try millions of other men” and to take John “whether he wants it or no” reflects the World State’s complete commodification of relationships. Unlike modern dating which still values mutual consent and emotional connection (however imperfectly), Fanny’s perspective treats relationships as purely recreational and interchangeable. Her militant suggestion to “act at once” with soma-induced courage reduces romance to conquest. This reveals the society’s elimination of intimacy’s emotional dimension - relationships are framed as consumer choices rather than meaningful bonds, with Fanny’s Y.W.F.A.-style lecturing showing how even advice about love has become institutionalized.5. Why does the conversation between John and Lenina shift so rapidly from tenderness to frustration? What does this reveal about their fundamental incompatibility?
Answer:
Their interaction deteriorates because John expresses love through poetic declarations and symbolic gestures (kissing her hand, quoting Shakespeare), while Lenina seeks straightforward physical affection. When John withdraws to prove his worthiness, Lenina interprets this as rejection, not understanding his cultural context. Their frustration stems from operating in completely different emotional languages - John’s is metaphorical and earned, Lenina’s is literal and immediate. This reveals their relationship’s tragic core: John wants to transcend physicality through romantic ideals, while Lenina, despite her unusual depth of feeling, remains a product of her sensory-driven society that lacks the vocabulary for his type of love.
Quotes
1. “A doctor a day keeps the jim-jams away,” he added heartily, driving home his hypnopaedic adage with a clap on the shoulder.
This quote exemplifies the society’s reliance on slogans and conditioned thinking to manage emotions, showing how medical care and psychological well-being are reduced to simplistic, repetitive mantras.
2. “But I don’t want them.” “How can you know till you’ve tried?” “I have tried.” “But how many?” asked Fanny, shrugging her shoulders contemptuously. “One, two?” “Dozens.”
This exchange highlights the central conflict between Lenina’s growing individuality (her desire for one specific person) and society’s insistence on promiscuity as the norm, showcasing the tension between personal desire and social conditioning.
3. “Well, if that’s the case,” said Fanny, with decision, “why don’t you just go and take him. Whether he wants it or no.”
This shocking suggestion reveals the dystopian society’s distorted views on consent and relationships, where taking what one wants is encouraged over mutual understanding or emotional connection.
4. “For always. They make a promise to live together for always.” “What a horrible idea!” Lenina was genuinely shocked.
This exchange between John and Lenina perfectly encapsulates the cultural clash between the Savage’s traditional values and the World State’s anti-monogamy conditioning, showing how fundamental relationship norms are inverted in this society.
5. “Answer me this question: do you really like me, or don’t you?”
Lenina’s direct question cuts through John’s poetic ramblings, representing the fundamental human need for clarity in relationships that persists even in this highly conditioned society, and setting up the chapter’s emotional climax.