Introduction

This book is not an autobiography: still less does it attempt to offer brief lives of the subjects of its various chapters. I have had an interesting life, but the interest derives not from anything I have done myself, but from the variety of people I have been lucky enough to know and work with. In succeeding chapters I hope to give an account of my interaction with them. This introductory chapter is intended to give a chronological summary of my own life, so that the reader can tell at what stage and in what capacity I was interacting with the various characters.

I was born in Liverpool on 16 March 1931, the son of John Kenny, an engineer on a steamship engaged in the banana trade, and his wife, Margaret (née Jones). Sadly, I have only fragmentary memories of my father. Not only was he continually at sea, but by the time I was two years old my parents’ marriage had broken up, and my mother and I lived in the house of my widowed grandmother. My father’s ship, Sulaco, was enrolled in the Merchant Navy, and in October 1940 it was sunk by a German submarine with the loss of almost the entire crew.

My schooling was strictly ecclesiastical. For two years I was educated by nuns of the order of La Sagesse in a Liverpool suburb, and for the next five I studied at the Jesuit school of Saint Francis Xavier in the centre of the city. My education was interrupted by periods of evacuation to the countryside to avoid the German bombs which were falling on Merseyside. At the age of 12, I entered Upholland college, the junior seminary of the Liverpool archdiocese, and remained there for six years. From there I moved to the English College in Rome to complete training for the priesthood. I was ordained a priest in 1955.

After ordination I undertook graduate studies in theology, writing a dissertation on religious language, which involved one year of study in Rome and one in Oxford. The year in Oxford expanded into two to allow me to write simultaneously a philosophical dissertation, which became my first published book, Action, Emotion and Will (1963) which, in a second edition, is still in print.

There followed four years as a curate in Liverpool, during which I became certain that my ordination had been a terrible mistake. Already, as a seminarian, I had felt doubts about aspects of the Catholic faith, but I stifled them. But before the four years were up, I had ceased to accept many of the doctrines that it was a priest’s obligation to believe and teach. I decided to leave the priesthood and was laicized by Pope Paul VI in 1963. A year or two later I met my future wife, Nancy Caroline Gayley of Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, and we were married in 1966. We have two sons: Robert, born in 1968, and Charles, born in 1970.

Since 1964, my life has centred upon Oxford University. My academic discipline, once I had left the Church, was philosophy. At Oxford, philosophy is taught as one of several groups of disciplines making up BA courses known as ‘honour schools’. The two principal ones were known as ‘Greats’, in which philosophy was combined with ancient history and literature, and ‘PPE’, in which it combined with politics and economics. After two terms in a temporary post shared between Trinity and Exeter colleges, I was elected to a tutorial fellowship at Balliol. Tutorial fellows of colleges form the backbone of Oxford’s academic staff. As a member of a college’s governing body, a fellow, however junior, shares, on equal terms, the administration of an ancient charitable corporation. If the fellow is also a tutor, he or she is responsible – perhaps with one or two colleagues – for the education of undergraduates in his or her own particular discipline.

When appointed to Balliol I was, as a matter of routine, made a Master of Arts of the university. This made me a member of Congregation, the assembly of all MAs engaged in teaching or administration in Oxford. Congregation was the town meeting of dons; in constitutional terms, it was the sovereign body of the university. Most of the university’s executive business was conducted by a much smaller elected body, called Hebdomadal Council; but any proposed change in the university statutes, or major item of business, had to be submitted for approval to Congregation, which met several times each term.

An autobiography of my Oxford days would have for its most accurate title, A Life in Committees. For the first part of my career, these would be college committees, and in the latter part, university committees. In the course of time I served on most college committees, but my main administrative experience was as senior tutor for four years. The senior tutor was responsible for the academic administration of the college, and for arranging and monitoring the tutorial teaching of junior members.

I had not been senior tutor for long when, in April 1976, I was placed on the search committee to seek a new Master to replace Christopher Hill, who was retiring in 1978. After a year considering various outside candidates, the Balliol fellows decided that they wanted to elect a candidate from within the fellowship. At this point I withdrew from the search committee, and was myself chosen as Master in the spring of 1978. I took office in October of that year.

The Master of a college has little statutory authority. He or she chairs the governing body, and has a casting vote, but the only power he or she has is the power to persuade. In the course of a dozen years as Master I often had to cheerfully accept being voted down. In the last week of every eight-week term, the Master has to conduct an operation known as ‘handshaking’. Undergraduates come, one by one, to sit at the dining table in the lodgings and listen to their subject tutors as they report to the Master on the term’s work. Handshaking gives a head of house an opportunity to check up on the tutors as well as undergraduates.

In an autobiography, I described the job of a Master in these words:

A Master of Balliol has to relate to the three different estates of the college: the junior members, the senior members, and the old members. It is one of his duties to try to make each of these groups understand and be ready to learn from the others. I spent much of my time trying to explain to undergraduates why dons think as they do and to dons why undergraduates behave as they do, and to alumni why the college today is not what it was when they were in the heyday of their youth. If I were asked to put the duties of a Master in a nutshell I would say that it is to be a peacemaker: to hold the ring between senior and junior members, to persuade one fellow that he has not been impardonably insulted by another, and to reconcile old members to the college of the present day.*

A job description today, rather than in the heyday of student revolution, would place less emphasis on peacekeeping between junior and senior members. It would, however, lay stress on something not then mentioned: the raising of funds for the college. I did in fact, as Master, head a septcentenary appeal; but it took less than two years, and for most of my tenure I was allowed to direct my energies elsewhere.

Being Master gave me an opportunity to meet Balliol alumni who had gone into various walks of life: several of them figure in later chapters. Members from past years would reassemble from time to time in gaudies, and sometimes they would come to take a look at the college and decide whether to encourage their children to apply to it. One such visit was made by William Rees-Mogg, then the editor of The Times. He took one look at the college, and one look at me, and decided to send his son Jacob to Trinity.

One of my philosophical interests was in the area of overlap between philosophy and law. In order to make an honest lawyer of myself I joined Lincoln’s Inn and sat Bar examinations during my last years at Balliol. I passed the academic stage, but was never called to the Bar because, not having any desire to practise, I did not take the practical examinations. However, in the course of time, Lincoln’s Inn made me an honorary bencher.

In 1980 I was elected to Hebdomadal Council, an elected body of some two dozen members presided over by the vice chancellor which, in the 1980s, met weekly in term time to conduct the business of the university. I served on many committees: in particular, I was a curator of the Bodleian Library, and chaired the Libraries Board, which funded nearly a hundred libraries across the university.

Having served as Master of Balliol for 11 years, I resigned. When first elected, I had been comparatively young, and therefore had stated that I would not hold office for more than 12 years. I was succeeded by Baruch Blumberg, an American Balliol alumnus who had won the Nobel Prize for Medicine. Barry was Jewish, but also a member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences. He had no difficulty in adapting the Balliol grace – ‘Benedictus benedicat’ – into Hebrew as ‘Baruch barucha’,* and he placed himself with enthusiasm under the patronage of the Balliol patron saint, St Catherine of Alexandria.

St Catherine is best known for breaking the wheel on which she was to have been martyred. She was also the patron saint of philosophers, having defeated in argument the hundred sages who had been employed by the Roman emperor to convert her to paganism and matrimony. She often appears in art as espoused in childhood to the infant Jesus. Indeed, of all the saints other than the Virgin Mary, she has a claim to be the one most frequently represented in Western painting.

The only problem with St Catherine is that she did not exist. She was invented, perhaps in the sixth century, by the abbot of a convent in Sinai who found that the abbey’s main relic, Moses’ burning bush, was no longer attracting enough pilgrims. He, or one of his monks, devised the legend, and concluded with a miraculous transfer of the saint’s body from Alexandria to Sinai. During my time at Balliol, Pope Paul VI, recognizing the fabulous nature of her biography, removed St Catherine’s feast from the Church’s calendar.

Barry Blumberg, having taken office as Master, regarded the saint’s removal from the calendar as an insult to Balliol. He took the matter up with Pope John Paul II at a meeting of the Pontifical Academy. The pope told him that St Catherine had been removed only from the universal Church calendar and her feast could still be celebrated locally. Barry and I remained puzzled as to how she could exist in some places and not in others, but the college continues to celebrate her every 25 November. Barry’s intervention must be the only time in history that a pope has been rebuked by a Jewish head of an Oxford college for an insult to the college’s patron.

When I left Balliol, I became instead the Warden of Rhodes House, and Secretary of the Rhodes Trust, which was my employer for the next ten years. A Warden of Rhodes House, as I understood the job, has four main tasks: as Secretary of the Rhodes Trust, he or she is chief (and sole) executive officer of a charitable foundation that derives ultimately from the will of Cecil Rhodes. As International Secretary of the Rhodes Scholarship scheme, the Warden has to keep in touch with national secretaries who, in a score of countries, organize locally the selection of Scholars. Once the Scholars are selected, it is the Warden’s task to place them in colleges and on courses in Oxford, and to provide their funding, monitor their performance and offer backup pastoral care during their time on stipend. Finally, the Warden is responsible for the upkeep and management of Rhodes House itself, which in addition to providing a residence and rooms for entertainment contains a number of grand ceremonial rooms which can be used for social and charitable purposes.

The trust at that time was governed by eight trustees, four from Oxford and four from London. The London trustees in my time included Lord Ashburton, Lord Armstrong of Ilminster, Lord Sainsbury of Preston Candover, and the Conservative cabinet minister William Waldegrave. As Warden, I was fortunate to be able to draw on the financial and political expertise thus represented. Without it, my task would have been impossible.

A few statistics will bring out some of the differences between being Master of Balliol and being Warden of Rhodes House. A Master must try to become acquainted with more than 500 Balliol men and women in residence at any time; a Warden, when I took over, had just over 200 Scholars to recognize and entertain. Each year a Master must chair nine governing bodies of sixty-odd fellows; a Warden, as Secretary of the Rhodes Trust, services annually three meetings of eight trustees. At Balliol, a Master is invited to attend, by my reckoning, some 260 committees a year; the Rhodes Trust has only one committee, and that does its business by circulation. The endowment income of Balliol in 1988–9 was £1,400,000; the endowment income of the Rhodes Trust in the same year was £4,900,000. A Master has to spend time seeking funds to increase the college’s endowment; one of a Warden’s duties was to distribute funds, at the behest of the trust, to institutions which solicit its aid. By the time I left Rhodes House the trust was worth almost £200,000,000, with an income approaching £6,000,000.

The prime charge on the assets of the trust was, of course, the upkeep of the scholarship scheme. I was fortunate to be Warden during a period of buoyancy on the stock market, and during my time the trustees greatly expanded the scholarship scheme. By the end of 1996, there was a record number of 247 Rhodes Scholars on stipend. After maintaining the scholarships, the trust usually had a substantial annual surplus to disburse on charitable purposes. Apart from educational causes in South Africa, the principal beneficiaries of the trust in the 1990s were the colleges and the University of Oxford.

My Rhodes job brought me into a new international circle of acquaintances. Shortly after I became Secretary of the Trust I was invited by the entrepreneur Algy Cluff to a party in honour of Robert Mugabe. The party was to encourage investment in Zimbabwe, and Algy must have hoped that the Rhodes Trust would put some of its funds there. The hope was not unrealistic because my predecessor as Warden, Sir Edgar Williams, had been a member of the delegation to Rhodesia that persuaded the British government to back Mugabe, rather than Bishop Muzorewa, as prime minister of the newly independent country. Mugabe, in those days, was soft spoken and gave an impression of great shyness. He gave a low-key speech of orthodox Marxist economics, and was followed by his finance minister who told us, in effect, not to worry about Comrade Mugabe’s remarks: ‘Gentlemen’, he said, ‘your money is safe with us.’ But I did not recommend the trustees to take up the invitation to invest.

The Rhodes Scholars who came under my care while I was Warden were, almost without exception, gifted and charming. Sadly, because they are scattered in many countries, I have not been able to keep in touch with them in the way that I have been able to make occasional contacts with the British alumni of my Balliol period. Quite a number of the Scholars, though, have already risen to senior office. From America I think of Senator Cory Booker from New Jersey, Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, and Ben Jealous, running for governor of Maryland. In Canada the foreign minister is Cynthia Freeland, who, while a Scholar, was already a leading correspondent of the Financial Times.

One Rhodes Scholar, who was already in Oxford determined to make his mark in the world, was Arthur Mutambara from Zimbabwe. Before coming to Oxford in 1991 he had been Secretary General of the University of Zimbabwe’s Student Union, where he had fallen foul of the authorities for making provocative political statements. One evening at dinner with us in Rhodes House he was loud in voicing criticisms of the Mugabe regime. My wife took him aside: ‘Be careful what you say, Arthur’, she said. ‘You don’t know who is listening, and you don’t want to find yourself put in prison when you get back to Zimbabwe.’ ‘Lady Kenny’, he said, pulling himself up to his full height, ‘when I get back to Zimbabwe it is going to be me who is putting people into prison.’

Sure enough, not many years after, Arthur became Deputy Prime Minister of Zimbabwe. This was when Morgan Tsvangirai of the Movement for Democratic Change was prime minister in an ill-fated Government of National Unity. Outmanoeuvred at the time by ZANU–PF, Arthur may yet have a political career in post-Mugabe Zimbabwe: we will watch with keen interest.

While I was Warden of Rhodes House I held a professorial fellowship at St John’s College, which gave me a new set of colleagues and friends. Shortly after I arrived there the college gave a party to celebrate one of its alumni, Tony Blair, becoming prime minister. When I was introduced as an ex-Master of Balliol, Blair’s response was, ‘You turned me down for Balliol, which was my first choice to read law.’ This was the first I knew of the matter, and of course it was not I, but the law tutors, who had rejected him. But I was amused that his rejection still rankled.

St John’s was a richer and more conservative college than Balliol. Feasts were celebrated in grand style, with the toastmaster announcing: ‘Mr President – I give you Church and Queen.’ Recently I was told by a fellow who joined the college in the year of Queen Elizabeth’s accession that when he first heard that toast he was sitting next to an elderly colleague who muttered, ‘Thank God for that! I could never get used to saying “Church and King”.’

In my last years at Balliol and my first years at Rhodes House I was a delegate of Oxford University Press (OUP). The Press is the publishing arm of the university and is one of the most important vehicles by which it carries out its educational mission. There are people in many parts of the world who know nothing of Oxford except its Press, and OUP’s dictionary makers have brought the university as much prestige as any of its faculties.

The delegates form the committee which is responsible to the university for the running of the Press. In my day there were 16 of us, each chosen for expertise in a particular subject; we met, gowned, under the chairmanship of the vice chancellor on alternate Tuesday mornings in the Clarendon Building, the Press’s original home. Our task was to approve a list of academic titles to go to contract. The actual work of commissioning, drawing up contracts, copy-editing, book production and marketing was of course the responsibility of professional publishers. But each subject editor worked closely with the relevant delegate, who saw all significant correspondence between editor, author and referees.

More significant than the delegacy itself is its finance committee. This is, in effect, the board of directors of a multimillion pound business with branches in many countries – the Press’s American branch is bigger in its own right than any academic publisher in the USA. The finance committee had a very different ethos from the delegates meeting: the vice chancellor did not preside, no gowns were worn, and meetings were held not in the antique splendour of the Clarendon Building, but in a glossy office in the Press’s new premises in Walton Street.

I was one of six delegates who sat on the committee. Alongside two outside members with business experience – Tim Rix and Martin Jacomb – we were in effect the non-executive members of the board, while the executive directors were the professional publishers who headed the different divisions of the Press. I was impressed by the way the Press maintained high academic standards while becoming ever more profitable. Every year it produced healthy annual surpluses which were used to assist the university – unlike most university presses in America which are subsidized by their parent bodies. In addition to supporting the university, OUP funded research projects on a substantial scale, such as the massive Oxford Dictionary of National Biography in 60 volumes, which was produced on time, and within budget, in 2005.

While the social and pastoral duties of the Warden of Rhodes House often intruded into the weekend, I found that the wardenship allowed me to also take on a London job for two days a week – first of all at the British Academy, then at the British Library. The British Academy is to the humanities and social sciences what the Royal Society is to the sciences. I had been elected to it in 1974, and from 1989 to 1993 I was its president. At that period, the Department of Education and Science had delegated to the Academy the provision of graduate scholarships to British students. As head of a body disbursing substantial government funds, I had to report from time to time to the Secretary of State for Education. During the Thatcher years, the office changed hands so often that I found it hard to keep count of successive secretaries: but I remember that of the ones I encountered, the least pompous and most efficient was Kenneth Clark.

Presiding over the Academy was my first experience of employing civil servants, and some of my decisions were unpopular with them. In order to decode their responses I had recourse to the former Cabinet Secretary, Robert Armstrong, who was one of my Rhodes trustees.

‘Should I be troubled’, I asked him, ‘if they tell me that morale among them is now at an all-time low?’

‘Don’t worry’, he told me, ‘they say things like that all the time.’

‘Suppose they say, “Would you mind giving me that instruction in writing?” What then?’

‘Oh, in that case, perhaps you should think again.’

After I ceased to be President of the British Academy I joined the board of the British Library, and in 1993 became its chair. I now reported to the Secretary of State for National Heritage, and my favourite was Virginia Bottomley – though, in the course of one of her visits to the library, she nearly killed me. I asked her to demonstrate the operation of the library’s new sliding shelves, and in particular the mechanism which ensured that no reader would be trapped when a pair of shelves slid together. The fail-safe device failed to be safe, and I had to shout ‘Virginia’ at the top of my voice to prevent being squeezed to death between two chunks of heavy metal.

My appointment to the British Library meant that I had to leave my position at Oxford University Press. I could foresee that my new post could give rise to conflicts of interest with great publishing firms. The British Library has the right to acquire a free copy of every book published in the UK, and this right of legal deposit is regarded by some publishers as burdensome. Moreover, one of my major tasks at the library was to try to arrange that the copyright privilege should be extended to publications in electronic rather than book form. This was eventually introduced into legislation, but only some years after my tedious negotiations with the publishers’ representatives.

I found that my experience at the Oxford libraries board was helpful when I was at the British Library, in particular in connection with catalogue digitization. I was, for a while, a member of the advisory board of the Online Computer Library Center (OCLC), the vast international digital catalogue, based in Ohio. As the great catalogue in the sky it soon trumped DOBIS/LIBIS, the European consortium we had erroneously backed when modernizing the Bodleian catalogue. I also chaired the committee that organized the British National Corpus, a vast database of current written and spoken English.

After I retired from Rhodes House, at the end of the millennium, I was briefly re-employed by Oxford University and made president of the university’s development campaign. I did not enjoy this job, was not good at it, and was glad when it was over. My successor, Tony Smith, told me that it should be an easy job: really rich people, he told me, were like cows with full udders, pleading to be milked. I hope that was how he found it – he was indeed a skilled fundraiser – but that was not at all my experience.

Once I retired, my wife Nancy, 12 years younger than me, became the main breadwinner. She had started our married life as a piano teacher and opera singer; now she found a new vocation in the service of Oxford University. Having been the lead amateur in assembling funds to build a university swimming pool, she turned professional and took charge of development for the Refugee Studies Centre. Later she switched to what she insisted was a quite distinct profession and became Head of Alumni Relations. Oxford was ahead of other universities in paying attention to its alumni, and Nancy soon became a leader of the profession nationally.

In parallel with my official postings I have enjoyed a career as a writer. Over a long life, I have published some 50 books on philosophy, religion, history and literature. Most of the titles are listed in a Festschrift compiled by my friends Peter Hacker and John Cottingham – Mind, Method, and Morality (OUP, 2010). My most substantial work was composed in retirement. After I left Rhodes House, Oxford University Press asked me to write a New History of Western Philosophy in four volumes. During the early years of the millennium, I submitted each year a volume of some 125,000 words. Eventually, in 2010, the entire history appeared in a single volume. Since then it has been translated into many languages, most recently Chinese and Romanian.

Two books that gave me great pleasure to work on were written in collaboration with my sons: one on happiness, published by Charles and myself in 2006, and one on the reform of Oxford, published by Robert and myself in 2007. Every one of my books has been read in draft by my wife, who has struck out many an ill-judged paragraph. She has placed my readers in her debt by saving them hours of unprofitable reading. For advice on the present book I am grateful to her, to Robert and Charles and their wives, and to Jill Paton Walsh.

Anyone who makes the mistake of reading this book as an autobiography may conclude that I have made friends only with academics and people in public office. This would be far from the truth. I have deliberately excluded from my dramatis personae the living members of my family and my closest personal friends. It is to them this book is dedicated.

Anthony Kenny

Notes

*A. Kenny, A Life in Oxford (London: John Murray, 1997), p. 18.

*‘May the Blessed One give a blessing.’