Wykeham Journal 2017 | Page 53

per annum in bursaries to 127 pupils, the equivalent of more than 80 full fees), and securing needs blind admission is, in my view, an achievable goal given that many parents who can afford to pay fees will continue to knock on its doors. I am convinced this will be a game-changer. Some will of course still attack the school for elitism. But it will no longer be on the back foot when it responds that it sets out to provide the best education in the country for those who can most benefit from it and that this is something everyone should support and be proud of. John Nightingale (D, 1973-77) contemporaries, I was scarcely afforded a glimpse of these rich collections, notwithstanding the fact the school set such store by cultural education. The Treasury, combined with the reinvigorated role of the archives and Fellows’ Library does more than put this right for current and future generations – both at the school itself but also more generally as the school reaches out to other schools in Hampshire and ensures that visitors to Winchester can get a privileged glimpse of its collections. And so to bursaries and access. The Treasury may have a special place in my heart but bursaries and the wider access that flows from them are for me the really big story which will determine whether the school continues to flourish, or indeed survives, through the twenty first century (and one should not underestimate how quickly sentiment can turn against established institutions in the current environment, particularly when the professional classes feel they have been squeezed out and no longer have an interest in maintaining them). We need to look forward to a time when, as with Oxbridge and leading universities in the US, money is not what determines whether you can take up a place at Winchester. The school has already made huge strides here (it is currently paying c. £3.1 million Wykehamists need to be wary of letting a sense of entitlement envelop them. We need to remember that a school like Winchester isn’t just plucked out of the air. Its quality and character have been established over 600 years by countless generations of donors who paid for its buildings, gave it treasures and endowed it handsomely. It is not easy for those who benefitted from all this to explain why they shouldn’t help others benefit similarly. One of the pleasures of serving on the Governing Body has been to see the Development team come together from very hesitant beginnings (that slightly comic British tradition of setting out to raise money but being far too embarrassed to ask for it outright) to form the highly professional team led by Lorna Stoddart and supported by a large cohort of committed Wykehamists and parents. They believe in what the school is doing and have gone out with huge enthusiasm to canvas support for a succession of great projects or causes, be it the Treasury, Quiristers, bursaries and now Kingsgate Park, to mention just a few. There is a lot to get excited about. A last thought. When I look at splendid baroque memorials with their prancing, skull-clasping putti and their effusive words on the virtues and achievements of our predecessors, I think how we have lost this easy assurance of being remembered by future generations. In the absence of alabaster putti (though I like to imagine there may still be a few Wykehamists planning grand mausolea) what are we to do? It is pretty obvious to me that the next best thing is to leave a handsome legacy to an i nstitution that is likely to be around for a bit. I will leave it to you to decide whether it should be for a bursary or some other noble purpose but suffice to say I am delighted that Winchester is now urging us all to think about such things. Ave atque vale! The Wykeham Journal 2017  49