Synopses & Reviews
A panorama of 20th-century social and political history, this biography details the life of E. I. Watkin (1888-1981). The interplay of love, friction, war, politics, and money, together with a relentless search for religious truth, makes this book read more like a novel than a biography. Watkin was the only child of Emmeline Paxton Ingram, a daughter of Herbert Ingram, the founder of the Illustrated London News. His father was the nephew of Sir Edward Watkin, the Liberal MP and railway magnate, who started to build the first Channel Tunnel and later a tower to rival Eiffels where Wembley Stadium now stands. Watkin became a Roman Catholic when he was at Oxford. His experience as one of the inner circle of Catholic writers is revealing: He was allowed to publish his books on philosophy, history, or literature, but when it came to the interpretation of the Catholic faith he was persistently harassed by the censors. Although Watkin was one of the foremost English precursors of the Second Vatican Council, he deeply deplored some of its consequences. His extraordinary life experiences were many and varied: from sitting on Mrs. Gladstones lap at the ceremonial opening of the Watkin Path up Snowdon, to falling instantly in love with Helena Shepheard at a party in 1912, at which point he stopped his diary writing. The story of that marriage, and the Watkin familys engagement with politicians and theologians about the political and social issues of the time, make for a truly fascinating biography of a most extraordinary man.
Review
“This is a fine and much-needed biography of a remarkable man whose life and work has been almost forgotten among Catholics today. . . . This book would be fascinating just for the vivid account of the vicissitudes of a remarkable family but it is Watkins intellectual achievements and the integrity and courage with which he fought for his beliefs that make it outstanding.” —Newman Studies Journal
Review
“A fascinating story.” —Catholic Herald
Review
“In the era before the Vatican Council E.I. Watkin was, like Lambert Beaudouin, Henri de Lubac and John Courtney Murray, a voice crying in the wilderness. He pleaded that the Church witness in a more living and general way to a number of values latent in her more deep-seated and venerable tradition and desperately needed by the contemporary world, but which had been swept to the margins by the working imperatives of a more circumscribed vision of the Christian vocation which temporarily enjoyed the ascendancy. This he came to call ‘ecclesiastical materialism. The three great causes for which Watkin contended in order that Catholicism might attain its fullness were a more general practice of contemplative prayer, a more widespread participation in the Liturgy and a bolder stand, particularly by the bishops, in the cause of peace. He was convinced that his own vocation was not to be a priest or an organizer, but to give himself entirely to writing. Without setting out to court trouble, he nevertheless found himself having brushes with the ecclesiastical censors. Although the issues involved were not serious, it pained him to have received the attentions of the churchs thought-police whose very existence spread doubts in the general public about the intellectual integrity of catholic writers. … It is good that a man of so many insights and contacts has received the memorial he deserves. The charm of Mrs. Goffins candid biography is that it is written from within the family and invites the reader to join in with the family. It would be all too easy to present E.I. Watkin as a lonely eminence, but in fact his life was thickly populated with relatives and friends, each of whom treads on the stage here to tell his own story. Mrs. Goffin has also explained with crystalline clarity all the issues with which her father became involved and the constantly shifting historical and social context of each of them. She has indeed written a work of pietas, but pietas in the Watkin fashion.” —Downside Review
Synopsis
The Watkin Path: An Approach to Belief is a panorama of twentieth-century social and political history seen through the life of E. I. Watkin (1888-1981). This biography is an interplay of love, friction, war, politics, and money, together with a relentless search for religious truth. At birth Watkin was handed over to his grandmother, an old lady who lived alone in a mansion by the river at Walton-on-Thames. He met few other children and his strange childhood may account for some of his eccentricities. Watkin became a Roman Catholic when he was at Oxford. His experience as one of the inner circle of Catholic writers is revealing. He was allowed to publish his books on philosophy, history, and literature, but when it came to the interpretation of the Catholic faith he was persistently harassed by the censors. Although Watkin was one of the foremost English precursors of the Second Vatican Council, he deeply deplored some of its consequences. His extraordinary life experiences were many
About the Author
Magdalen Goffin is the youngest daughter of the philosopher and historian E. I. Watkin by his wife Helena Shepheard. She is a former director of book promotion at the British Council and is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. She wrote numerous articles and reviews for the New York Review of Books and is the author of The Diaries of Absalom Watkin: A Manchester Man 1787-1861 and Maria Pasqua.