Reviewing the Infamous Speech That John Betjeman Gave at Repton School in 1956

In June 1956, Repton School invited the celebrated British poet, writer, and broadcaster John Betjeman to present prizes at its Speech Day. Betjeman, who had strong ties with the Derbyshire school, visited on various occasions throughout the 1940s and 1950s.

While Betjeman had a great fondness for Repton, his Speech Day address, described by a local paper as “gaily provocative,” would prove somewhat controversial. Full of Betjeman’s trademark humour and love of architecture, his speech also captured a view of Repton School as it was in the mid-century.

Here, we’ll take a look at Betjeman’s infamous Repton School speech, in which he said “everything that should not be said at a speech day.”

John Betjeman: Poetry, Prose, and Television

Born in 1906, Betjeman was the son of a prosperous maker of silverware. Though he began his career as a journalist, he became one of the best-loved poets of the 20th century.

Taught by T.S. Eliot at an early age, Betjeman was the UK poet laureate from 1972-84. Wry humour, nostalgia, and observances of everyday life characterised his poetic work. Among his most well-known poems are ‘A Subaltern’s Love Song’ (1945), ‘Diary of a Church Mouse’ (1954), and ‘The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel’ (1937).

Betjeman’s passion for Victorian architecture led him to found The Victorian Society, and he published many essays on the subjects of conservation and English counties. Two examples are First and Last Loves (1952) and The English Town in the Last Hundred Years (1956).

Betjeman was also a broadcaster and much-admired figure on British television, once described as “amongst the first to appreciate the power of television as a broadcasting medium to communicate to the largest possible audience.”

John Betjeman and Repton School

Betjeman’s connection with Repton School sprang from his friendship with the School’s then-headmaster and his wife. Theodore Lynam Thomas served as Repton’s headmaster during the 1940s and 1950s. Betjeman would regularly stay with the couple in their Trebetherick holiday home on Cornwall’s north coast.

Betjeman visited Repton several times and loved the School’s beautiful architecture, set against the picturesque backdrop of rural Derbyshire. Steeped in history, Repton’s buildings stand on the site of a 7th-century Anglo-Saxon Benedictine abbey and a 12th-century Augustinian priory.

In his book Pictorial History of English Architecture (1972), Betjeman wrote that his “favourite Saxon interior is the crypt under Repton Church…its designers had captured holy air and encased it in stone.”

Repton School’s 1956 Speech Day

Lynam Thomas asked Betjeman to present the prizes at Repton’s 1956 Speech Day, the event celebrating the end of the academic year.

Betjeman felt honoured that Repton had selected him for the opportunity. During his speech, he noted that the headmaster must be a “liberal-minded man” to ask someone “so much out of touch” with the school experience to give the address.

Betjeman covered many topics in his speech, including the arts and sciences, Repton alumni, and his reflections on life at school.

Repton Alumni and the Arts

In his speech, Betjeman praised the work of various Old Reptonians who had pursued careers in the arts. These included:

  • The film-maker Anthony Gross.
  • Musicians Eric Maschwitz and Arnold Brook.
  • Writer Denton Welch, who had recently passed away.
  • Artist Anthony Devas, who, after studying at Repton School, went on to Slade School of Fine Art, where he learnt from Henry Tonks. In 1956, Devas had six pictures in the Royal Academy.

As a poet and writer himself, Betjeman felt that the books handed out as prizes at the Speech Day were worth reading and chosen with “a good deal of sense.”

School Life

Betjeman’s warmth and affection for Repton School shone through his words. He said that he believed he could always tell whether school pupils were “sensitive or crushed” and found boys at Repton weren’t particularly crushed.

He went on to reminisce on past speech days from his time at school, touching on the small details of everyday life in a way that echoed his poetic style. He recalled the smell of hair oil, worrying that his parents might embarrass him or over or underdress, while noting how “unusually smart and clean” everybody in the audience looked.

Though he felt removed from his own school experience, Betjeman sought to relate to the Repton pupils: “I do know what it is like…I sort of remember about ‘playing the game’ and ‘keeping a straight bat.’ But I am no athlete at all.”

Referencing Repton School’s strong reputation for sporting excellence, which continues today, Betjeman added: “I am not at all the sort of person you should have asked here with your wonderful cricket reputation — cricket was absolute torture to me.”

Science, Progress, and Architecture

Betjeman injected his characteristic passion for architecture and the British countryside into his speech. This included a criticism of the new power station built in the nearby village of Willington and its impact on the scenery.

He described how those involved in the construction did not care about “trees being knocked down and the outline of the hills done away with.”

He added: “Of course, that is progress. But progress to what? If they are going to progress that way, and huge asphalt playgrounds for factories take the place of the old things in which we have our roots, it isn’t worth progressing.”

Betjeman ended his address by highlighting “what really matters” and the things that science cannot teach: “About love, and falling in love; how to tell the good building from the bad building; why this building we are now in [Pears School] is more hard and new-looking than the Priory; why that little crypt in your church at Repton, though so small, seems so large, and ancient, and mysterious when you stand in it. That kind of thing science cannot tell you. And until that sort of thing is extinct there is hope for us all, and there is hope for England.”

The Legacy of Betjeman’s Speech

Inevitably, Betjeman’s speech received some criticism. The next day, the Burton Daily Mail wrote that he had “said everything that should not be said at a speech day, he lambasted ‘sport, science, television, prigs, and Willington power station.’ And behind the humour lay the challenge of a man who spoke in defence of the arts and older humanities.”

Despite raising controversial topics, Betjeman cared enormously about Repton School, its pupils, architecture, and rich history. His speech demonstrated his love for the arts and his admiration for the creative minds that Repton produced. These have remained key attributes of Repton School right up to the present day, and pupils continue to thrive in its inspiring, historic setting.

About Repton School

Repton School in Derbyshire is among the UK’s top co-educational independent boarding schools. A through-school that educates children from the age of 3 (starting at Repton Prep), Repton nurtures pupils up to the age of 18. Pupils at Repton excel across academia, sports, and the creative and performing arts, enjoying modern facilities and dedicated staff who encourage pupils to explore their passions and interests.

Repton School boasts a long list of successful and well-known alumni, including actor Tom Chambers and novelists Kate Allan and Caroline England.

Learn more about Repton School.

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