Druin Burch

The true value of going to Oxford

Oxford (Credit: Getty images)

Difficult, I know, to spend your life dreaming of having gone to Oxford. This year’s offers have just been announced and Cambridge’s are imminent. I feel for those who miss out, but I have some words of comfort.

My late mother told me I announced my desire to study at Oxford aged seven, visiting the city on a family day trip. My earliest memories of the university, though, came from books: those whose dust jackets announced the name of the author’s college – especially when they mentioned taking a First.

My luck was in coming to understand that the Oxford I longed for was always fictional

Books open a world of dreams, and while my undeveloped tastes ran to witches and elves and orcs, I noticed where Tolkien and his friend C S Lewis taught. Middle Earth and Balliol alike were born of imagination fed by print. Later came the wonder of Brideshead, first through the old Granada series, then via Waugh himself.

Comments

Join the debate for just $5 for 3 months

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first three months for $5.

Already a subscriber? Log in