Longtime Salt-Box readers may have noticed that my archives haven’t yet made it over to the new WordPress version. I’m still not quite sure what I think about that.
But I do like to provide a service to the people who get here via Google! And since Mark Bauerlein gave T. E. Hulme’s “Romanticism and Classicism” a plug on InsideHigherEd.com this morning*, this seems like a good time to restore access to the Hulme essay.
Without further ado, then, here is the much-searched for link to a .pdf of the fulltext of Hulme’s “Romanticism and Classicism,” from his collection of essays, Speculations. I believe the text to be out of copyright.
Enjoy!
–notes–
If it affords Mark any comfort, I get visitors to the site every single day looking for Hulme’s essay–during the semester, sometimes up to 10 a day. So clearly *someone* out there is reading him. And I use the essay as a frame for my Brit Lit II classes, which are explicitly conceived as a semester-long investigation of the idea of tradition.
Tora Mahanta | 29-Jul-07 at 10:58 am | Permalink
Can you share your knowledge of T.E. Hulme’s influence on poets and critics?
jbj | 29-Jul-07 at 8:07 pm | Permalink
The place to begin looking at Hulme’s influence is Ronald Schuchard’s _Eliot’s Dark Angel_, which has a chapter on Eliot and Hulme. (His bibliography is also v. helpful.)