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William Lindsay Renwick

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Nationality
  
Scottish

Discipline
  
English Literature

Spouse(s)
  
Margaret Lang

Died
  
25 November 1970

Born
  
6 January 1889
Glasgow

Occupation
  
Regis Professor of English Literature

Notable works
  
Edmund Spenser: An Essay on Renaissance Poetry

Books
  
English Literature, Seventeen Eighty-Nine to Eighteen Fifteen

People also search for
  
Peter Whiteford, Harold Orton, Edmund Spenser

William Lindsay Renwick (6 January 1889 to 25 November 1970) was Professor of English Literature at the University of Durham from 1921 to 1945 and Regis Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature at Edinburgh University from 1945-1959.

Contents

Early life and education

William was born at 32 Kelvin Drive, Glasgow, on 6 January 1889, the youngest of five children of Jane Renwick (née Lindsay), a teacher of English, and William Kirkwood Renwick, a mercantile clerk.

Raised in the family home at 12 Arlington Street, Glasgow, William was educated at the local Woodside School. Although, William always maintained strong links with Glasgow, he had a strong affinity to the Borders where his paternal grandfather was a shepherd near Garvald. In October 1907, William enrolled at the University of Glasgow and graduated with an ordinary MA degree on 10 June 1910 undertaking classes in Mathematics, Logic, and Moral Philosophy.

William's contemporaries while he studied for an MA were Walter Elliot, John Boyd and George Buchanan Smith. He was active in Union discussions, contributed to debates, and in literary societies such as the Mermaid Club. He was also subeditor of the Glasgow University Magazine 1909-1910 and some of his contributions appear in two anthologies of Glasgow University verse.

In the 1910/11 session, William took up classes in English and History, obtaining First Class Honours in his English exam. In 1912, he was awarded the George A. Clark Scholarship which allowed him to study French & Italian at the Sorbonne, Toulouse and the British School in Rome.

First World War

Upon the outbreak of war, William joined the tenth battalion of the Cameronians (The Royal Scottish Rifles) on 27 September 1914. He experienced trench warfare with this regiment & rose quickly in the ranks to become a Captain, serving at home and in France where his battalion took part in the Battle of Loos. After experiencing this particularly devastating attack, acc ording to his entry on Glasgow University’s Roll of Honour, he felt ‘like a ghost, an old ghost, sceptical and disillusioned.’"

Six months later, he was invalided and sent home for hospital treatment. Thereafter, he was only to undertake instructional duties.

On 11 October 1917, William wed his fellow Glasgow University graduate, Margaret Lang, at Eastwood Parish Church. Margaret’s brother, Arthur Lang, another Glasgow honours graduate, was killed in action in August 1916.

Interwar years

William returned to civilian life in 1919 and studied at Merton College at Oxford University and was awarded with a B.Litt degree for his thesis on the renaissance poet, Edmund Spenser.

William then returned to Glasgow where he lectured for a short spell at Glasgow University; residing at 32 Keir Street, Pollokshields. It was during this period of 1920-21, that he enrolled for one year in evening classes at The Glasgow School of Art in order to learn bookbinding. Following this, William moved to Newcastle-upon-Tyne to become Professor of English Literature at the University of Durham in 1921. In April 1926, he was awarded a DLitt by the University of Glasgow for his thesis, Edmond Spenser : an essay on Renaissance poetry, and received an honorary doctorate by the University of Bordeaux in 1934.

He remained Professor of English Language and Literature at King's College, University of Durham, for twenty four years from 1921 to 1945.

World War Two and later life

Upon the outbreak of the Second World War, William joined the Home Guard where he was made a commander. He also spent a year in China as a visiting Professor, lecturing with the British Council on a tour of Chinese Universities offering support to academic staff from 1943-1944.

Following the end of the war in 1945, William was appointed Regis Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature at Edinburgh University. Moving to a new home in Edinburgh overlooking Arthur’s Seat, he was to remain in this role until he retired in 1959. The sub-department of English for Foreign Students was established in this period and he was also involved in the setting up of the School of Scottish Studies in 1951. In 1953, William was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Law by the University of Glasgow.

He died on 25 November 1970, aged eighty-one, in an Edinburgh hospital.

The Renwicks left 26 works of art to the University of Glasgow in 1986/7 through the bequest of William's wife, Margaret, in 1985. The collection highlights in particular the Scottish artists of the twentieth century.

Professor William Lindsay Renwick is commemorated on The Glasgow School of Art’s First World War Roll of Honour.

Selected publications

  • Edmund Spenser - An essay on renaissance poetry (1925).
  • Edmund Spenser's Complaints, (1928).
  • Spenser's works (1928).
  • Daphaida and other Poems, (1929).
  • The Shepherd's Calendar, (1930).
  • He also edited Spenser's A view of the present state of Ireland (1934).
  • John of Bordeaux (1936).
  • The beginnings of English literature (1939).
  • A contribution to the Oxford history of English literature dealing with the period 1715-1815.
  • The Faerie Queene, (1947).
  • English Literature, 1789-1815, (1963).
  • Kipling's Mind and Art, (1964).
  • John Moore's Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters and Manners in Various Countries .
  • References

    William Lindsay Renwick Wikipedia