William Paton Ker

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William Paton Ker (usually referred to as "W. P. Ker"; August 30, 1855 - July 17, 1923) was a Scottish literary scholar and essayist.

W. P. Ker.
W. P. Ker.

He was born in Glasgow in 1855. He studied at Glasgow Academy, the University of Glasgow and Balliol College, Oxford.

He was appointed to a fellowship at All Souls College, Oxford in 1879. He became Professor of English Literature and History at the University College of South Wales, Cardiff in 1883; and moved to University College London as Quain Professor in 1889. He was the Oxford Professor of Poetry from 1920 to his death while hill-climbing in Europe. A W. P. Ker Memorial Lecture is held at Glasgow University in his honour.

He is referred to repeatedly, with affection and respect in J. R. R. Tolkien's famous essay "Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics," and it is likely this lecture which W. H. Auden refers to in offering his own tribute:

(after describing how "surrendering to his immediate desire" a poet may do the best thing he could have done: he attended a lecture delivered by Tolkien. He remembers not a single word, but at a certain point Tolkien recited a long passage from Beowulf. If not for that he would not have been driven to read and be strongly influenced by Anglo-Saxon and Middle English poetry):

"But this was something which neither I nor anybody else could have foreseen. Again, what good angel lured me into Blackwell's one afternoon and, from such a wilderness of volumes, picked out for me the essays of W. P. Ker? No other critic whom I have subsequently read could have granted me the same vision of a kind of literary All Souls Night in which the dead, the living and the unborn writers of every age and tongue were seen as engaged upon a common, noble and civilizing task. No other could have so instantaneously aroused in me a fascination with prosody, which I have never lost." (Page 42, The Dyer's hand and other essays, "Making, Knowing, and Judging,").

[edit] Works

  • Epic and Romance: Essays on Medieval Literature (1897); second edition, 1908.
  • The Dark Ages [1904]
  • Sturla the Historian (1906)
  • Tennyson (1909)
  • English literature; medieval (1912) — also known as Medieval English literature (ISBN-13: 9780198880431 ISBN: 019888043X)
  • Two Essays (1918)
  • Sir Walter Scott (1919)
  • The Art of Poetry (1923)
  • Form And Style In Poetry (1928)
  • On Modern Literature
  • Collected Essays (1968) edited by Charles Whibley

He is mentioned in W. H. Auden's essay (he later took the same poetry chair at Oxford) Making, Knowing, and Judging.

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