Wykeham Journal 2015 | Page 18

I knew that Div, in particular, had given me a substantial advantage in life from the moment I went to my Oxford interview. It has been an honour and a fascinating and enriching experience to have served as this year’s Guest Editor of the Wykeham Journal. My aim is, from the perspective of the outsider, to represent the fundamental change wrought at Winchester under Dr. Ralph Townsend’s aegis; to show how his tenure has left the College positioned to meet the challenges of the future and to fulfil a clear role in a turbulent world, by producing individuals who are able and prepared to make a contribution in a manner denoted by the confidence of understatement. My appointment as Editor of the Wykeham Journal was an entirely unforeseen occurrence. This is because I re-connected with the School in any way only in September 2015, nearly 37 years after I left. My Oxford contemporary, Professor Andrew O’Shaughnessy of the University of Virginia, an award-winning author, eminent historian of the US, Keeper of the Thomas Jefferson Papers at Monticello, and an old friend and Eton colleague of Dr. Townsend’s, came to New Hall to give a talk, to which I was invited. Watching New Hall fill, I was transported to my school play experience, as a fourteen-year-old, in the same venue, playing the pivotal dramatic role of Third Myrmidon in Troilus and Cressida. For a week I shuffled on stage each evening in a kind of rust-coloured skirt, carrying an unwieldable spear, assassinated Hector after a fashion, and declaimed in a tremulous voice the words I had been ceaselessly repeating in my head, ‘The Trojan trumpets sound the like my Lord.’ Mostly the right words; sometimes the right order. I don’t know if the skirt was appropriate attire for a murderous Thessalian warrior but it had certainly provided a welcoming home to a phalanx of the College prop store’s fleas, necessitating an embarrassing visit to the Sanatorium. 14  The Wykeham Journal 2015 That same evening I met Ralph, Cathy and several young Wykehamists and found myself once more involved with Winchester. Subsequently, to my considerable pride and slight embarrassment, I was invited to edit the Journal. My five years at Winchester had been inglorious. I don’t want to belabour readers with anecdotes of public school life in the late 1970s. I was not technically expelled, though I was perilously close on a number of occasions, and what I shall call here a telephonic prank shortly after leaving, a cruel and thoughtless one, led to a fairly firm suggestion by my recently unburdened Housemaster that I make the parting of the ways a permanent state of affairs. I complied with this instruction more strictly than some others I had received. Nevertheless, in September 2015 I hoped enough water had flowed in thirty-seven years. This seems to have been the case! My subsequent career has been varied, though it was top-and-tailed with spells as a university teacher. The first, in the early 1980s, scratched for me an existence in the sub-soil of academe as an accuratelytitled non-stipendiary lecturer at Oriel and Balliol; more recently I was a Visiting Fellow in Finance teaching exceptionally motivated international MBA students at the Cass Business School in the City University. In the mid-1980s, I worked as a writer and executive producer for White City Films (the BBC) and Video Arts, which was Sir Anthony Jay’s and John Cleese’s production company. But, the better part of my adult life, twenty three years in total, was spent as an executive of the Wall Street Investment and UK Merchant banks Morgan Stanley, SG Warburg, Morgan Grenfell/Deutsche Bank and JP Morgan. Enough words have been spent