Everything about T E Hulme totally explained
Thomas Ernest Hulme (
September 16 1883 –
28 September 1917) was an English writer, who during his informal tenure from 1909 as critic for
The New Age, edited by
A. R. Orage, exerted a notable influence on London
modernism.
He is known also as a poet, but wrote little:
The Complete Poetical Works of T.E. Hulme was published in
The New Age in 1912, at which point it consisted of five poems. He does have the claim to have been the original
Imagist poet; and to have formulated with clarity the manifesto. This had a direct effect on
Ezra Pound. He also influenced
T. S. Eliot through his critical writings, in which he famously distinguished between
Romanticism--a style informed by a belief in the infinite in man and nature, famously characterized by Hulme as "spilt religion"--and
Classicism, a mode of art stressing human finitude, formal restraint, concrete imagery, and, in Hulme's words, "dry hardness".
Hulme also had a major impact on
Wyndham Lewis (quite literally, in terms of their competition for
Kate Lechmere). In art he championed
Jacob Epstein, and
David Bomberg, and was a friend of
Gaudier-Brzeska, as well as being in at the birth of Lewis's
BLAST and
vorticism.
Early life
He was born at Gratton Hall,
Endon, in
Staffordshire, the son of Thomas and Mary Hulme. He was educated at
Newcastle-under-Lyme High School and
St John's College, Cambridge from 1902; he read mathematics, but was sent down in 1904 (after
Boat Race night and rowdyism — he was thrown out of Cambridge another time in a scandal involving a
Roedean girl).
He tried to pick up the threads of his studies at
University College, London. He then travelled to
Canada, roughing it. He also spent time in
Brussels, acquiring languages.
Proto-modernist
From about 1907 he was interested in
philosophy, translating
Henri Bergson, and sitting in on lectures in Cambridge. He also translated
Georges Sorel's
Reflections on Violence. The most important influence on his thought appears to have been first Bergson, and later
Wilhelm Worringer (1881-1965), German art historian and critic; and in particular his
Abstraktion und Einfühlung (
Abstraction and Empathy, 1908). These he synthesized with his own muscular proto-modernism and intense combativeness.
Hulme also at this time developed an interest in poetry, not sustained longer than a few years in fact. He was made secretary of
The Poets' Club, formal and attended by establishment figures (
Edmund Gosse and
Henry Newbolt); here he encountered Pound, and
F. S. Flint, a poetic follower. In late
1908 he delivered his paper
A Lecture on Modern Poetry to the club.
Robert Frost met Hulme in 1913, and was influenced by his ideas. Hulme's extremely robust, and in many ways indefensible, approach to life did combine with a more outgoing nature than some.
His politics were conservative, and he moved towards a far-right position. He had contact in 1911 with
Pierre Lasserre, associated with
Action Française. This can be seen as presaging the 'tough-minded' attitudes that would permanently mar the reputations of Lewis and Pound.
World War I
Hulme volunteered as an artilleryman in 1914, and served with the
Royal Marine Artillery in France and Belgium. He kept up his writing for
The New Age, with 'War Notes', written as "North Staffs", and 'A Notebook' containing some of his most organised critical writing. He was wounded in 1916. Back at the front in 1917 he was killed by a shell at
Oostduinkerke near
Nieuwpoort, in
West Flanders.
Further Information
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