Moelwyn Merchant

William Moelwyn Merchant (5 June 1913 22 April 1997) was an academic, novelist, sculptor, poet and Anglican priest. He was born in Port Talbot, Glamorgan, Wales, and his first language was Welsh. He was educated at University College, Cardiff. He died in retirement at Leamington Spa.[1]

After teaching at the University of Wales, in 1961 Merchant was appointed Professor and Head of Department of English at the University of Exeter. He was responsible for the beginnings of the study of Drama at the university. He left Exeter in 1974 to teach at the University of Chicago. As an academic, he is best known for his widely used editions of Shakespeare.

In addition to his academic work, Merchant was active in the Church of England. After leaving Chicago he became Canon and Chancellor of Salisbury Cathedral, before returning to Wales to become vicar of Llandewibrefi near Tregaron. Late in life he wrote a series of fictionalised accounts of biblical stories, including biographies of Jesus (Jeshua: Nazareth to Jerusalem), Elijah (Fire from the heights)[2] and Paul (A bundle of papyrus), and a treatment of the early history of the Israelites, Inherit the land.

Merchant published a number of books of poetry, including Breaking the Code (1975), No Dark Glass (1979) and Confrontation of Angels (1986), and also wrote libretti for Alun Hoddinott. The BBC made a film about him, Vicar of a Country Parish.[3]

Merchant took to sculpture relatively late in life. He was strongly influenced by his close friend Barbara Hepworth.[4] He had numerous solo shows, and also exhibited jointly with Josef Herman; his work is still in demand. Examples of it stand on the campuses of the Universities of Stirling (Growing Form),[5] Cardiff (British Triad), Exeter (Ascending Form and Tension) and Warwick (Triad); at the Margam sculpture park at Port Talbot; and in All Saints' Church, Leamington Spa (Confrontation of Angels). He donated Ascending Form to the University of Exeter after his retirement, and both this and Tension now form part of the "Sculpture Walk" through the university campus, along with a piece of Hepworth's, which Merchant was instrumental in obtaining for the university.

Works

Shakespeare and the Artist, Oxford University Press, 1959.[6]

gollark: Okay then.
gollark: I could deploy a few more of my alts?
gollark: No.
gollark: It's very dry.
gollark: One of my textbooks says "[Euler's identity] is considered an example of mathematical beauty" in the section on complex numbers and de Moivre's thing, which I think is somewhat funny.

References

  1. David Shaw; Paul Merchant (3 May 1997). "Obituary: The Rev Professor W. Moelwyn Merchant". The Independent. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  2. "Book Reviews". Churchman, volume 106. Church Society website.
  3. "Vicar of a Country Parish", BBC Midlands website, 10 March 2007
  4. "Art world's Welsh national gallery wish list". By Helen Clifton BBC News, 26 March 2017
  5. "Historic gems people in Burton rarely notice". Derbyshire Live, 31 May 2020, by Jenny Moody
  6. Stanley Wells (28 November 2002). Shakespeare Survey. Cambridge University Press. pp. 41–. ISBN 978-0-521-52375-2.
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