Club Room, 12noon. Bar and coffee counter open prior to event.Scottish
Arts Club Members: free. Guests: £5.00 via Eventbrite.
Richard Burdon Haldane, Viscount Haldane of Cloan (1856-1928) was a
towering, if controversial figure in British politics across the
opening decades of the twentieth century. His influence lies at the
bedrock of our modern university system and of the nation’s ability
to fight the bloody battles of the First World War; yet he is little
known today. A philosopher and lawyer by training, this astonishingly
versatile Scotsman was also deeply engaged with the world of the arts.
His closest friends included J.M. Barrie, John Buchan, and the
literary critic Edmund Gosse, while one of the great loves of his
life, Frances Horner, had been the favourite muse of Edward
Burne-Jones. The creation of Oscar Wilde’s The Ballad of Reading
Gaol can even be traced back to Haldane. This talk will introduce this
much-neglected figure and shed light on why Haldane’s example of a
cultured and artistically engaged statesmanship is so vitally needed
today.
Brief CV:
Richard McLauchlan was educated at the universities of St Andrews and
Cambridge, where he completed a Ph.D. on the poetry of R.S. Thomas. He
is the author of Saturday’s Silence: R.S. Thomas and Paschal Reading
and co-founder of the Scottish charity Light Up Learning. For the last
five years, he has been collaborating with John Campbell OBE on
Haldane: The Forgotten Statesman who Shaped Modern Britain, which will
be published by Hurst in May 2020.
culture
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26/04/2020 Last update