This paper examines a radical text by the English Classicist and homosexual
, John Addington Symonds (1840-1893). Through a close study of an unpublish
ed and long concealed manuscript, "A Problem in Modern Ethics" (1891), Symo
nds's political vision and the odd form of writing it takes is revealed as
romantic in character. Symonds polemicizes against the pathologization of h
omosexuals in the legal-medical discourses of the time and advocates on beh
alf of a latent homosexual ethics, shunned from modem Western society, but
continuing to hold forth a promise for the civic and moral renewal of Weste
rn countries. Against thr positions of Krafft-Ebing and others, Symonds arg
ues for the acceptance of "manly love,'' in the spirit of the ancients, as
a source of moral inspiration for a declining Europe. Where Symonds is ofte
n read by historians of homosexual radicalism as a precursor to the radical
tradition of the 20th century, romantic acceptance of the untimeliness of
his moral vision, indicates less a politically progressive than a romantica
lly fatalistic enterprise.