Joe Hulme | Parker–Hulme murder case | Denny Hulme | William Hulme's Grammar School | Kathryn Hulme | Hulme | Hulme Hall, Manchester | Hulme Hall | Cheadle Hulme School | Cheadle Hulme | Upper Hulme | John Walter Hulme | Hulme Locks Branch Canal | Hulme Hall, Allostock | Daniel Hulme |
A Lecture on Modern Poetry was a paper by T. E. Hulme which was read to the Poets' Club around the end of 1908.
He reacted against the prevailing intellectual climate of the 1930s, particularly the Auden Group, preferring to go back to the anti-romantic T. E. Hulme, and to the Anglican tradition.
His subsequent association with Ezra Pound and T. E. Hulme, together with his deepening knowledge of innovative French poetic techniques, radically affected his poetry's development; Flint invented the open verse phrase 'unrimed cadence'.
Abe became acquainted with British modernism, and especially the concepts of intellectualism associated with T.E. Hulme, Herbert Read and T.S. Eliot.