Further Speculations by T.E. Hulme by Sam Hynes (Ed.)

By Sam Hynes (Ed.)

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But he forgot that walking is not the only method of progression, and that the logical method of thought may not be the only way of understanding reality. By many toilsome ways Bax, like Moses, leads us to the Promised Land; then, having privately surveyed it, informs us that, after all, it isn't really interesting, tells us to go back again, but always to bear in mind that there is such a place. That is, the intellect is still for him the only way of getting at Reality, though we are always to remember that by its very nature it can never reach it.

I had not long to wait for the first conclusive test. On the way to Italy I stopped two days at Dieppe with Jules de Gaultier, about 22 NOTES ON THE BOLOGNA CONGRESS whom I have already written a little in this Review. It was a test under most favourable circumstances. Generally in discussing metaphysic one is, apropos of the other man's point, immediately "reminded" of something of one's own which one wants to drag out, and so one never passes outside the limits of one's first concept. But in this case fate made me a perfect listener, for while I understood him perfectly, I had not spoken French for so long that all my uprisings of interruption were stifled automatically before utterance.

I shall return to the subject of the enormous number of firemen which guarded us later. I finally reached the Salla di seduti generale. My general impression is of a broad red line at the end, forming the drapery of the platform, and a regular garden of extraordinary hats; great numbers of pretty women — surely this cannot be the world of "Reality"— I do hope they are not philosophers; and then, vaguely, some drums heard outside. 27 NOTES ON BERGSON I It seems to me that the best way to write about Bergson is to start some distance off.

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