Background
William Minto was born on October 10, 1845, at Auchintoul, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
William Minto was born on October 10, 1845, at Auchintoul, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
As a child William Minto was educated at various village and private schools, including the Gordon Schools, Huntly. He gained a bursary and entered the newly united University of Aberdeen in 1861. He achieved great academic success, uniquely taking honours in three departments — classics, mathematics, and philosophy — and graduating MA in 1865. He attended Aberdeen’s Divinity Hall in 1865-1866 before going to Merton College, Oxford as an exhibitioner, where he stayed for only one year and left without taking a degree.
Minto returned to Aberdeen and briefly became assistant to the professor of natural philosophy (physics), before being appointed assistant to Alexander Bain, the professor of Logic and under whom he had studied and whose Chair carried the responsibility of teaching English literature. He served as Bain’s assistant from 1867 to 1873 and during this period prepared his Manual of English Prose Literature, Biographical and Critical, an exhaustive and systematic work that was published in 1872.
In 1873 Minto, like Bain before him, moved to London and to journalism. He contributed literary and political articles to The Examiner, which he edited between 1874 and 1878. Subsequently he was a leader-writer on the Daily News, writing able and pungent criticisms of Disraeli's imperial policy (allegedly giving currency to the word jingoism). In 1874 he published Characteristics of English Poets from Chaucer to Shirley, and in 1879 a monograph on Defoe for the English Men of Letters series. He wrote a number of articles on literary subjects for the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
In 1880 on the retirement of Bain, Minto was elected to the Regius Chair of Logic and English in Aberdeen University, a post he held until his death. Though Logic and Rhetoric had long been combined in a single Chair at the Scottish universities, Minto’s occupancy of the Chair was marked by a much great emphasis on the study and teaching of literature than logic. He edited Walter Scott's Lay of the Last Minstrel (1886) and Lady of the Lake (1891), Scott's poetical works (1887), and Autobiographical Notes of the Life of William Bell Scott (1892. He also wrote three novels — The Crack of Doom (1886), The Mediation of Ralph Hardelot (1888), and Was she good or bad? (1889).
Minto's health began to decline in 1891, and he died on March 1, 1893, in Aberdeen, at the aged of 47.
William Minto was a famous man of letters, who wrote for the Daily News and the Pall Mall Gazette.
Quotations: "An attitude of philosophic doubt, of suspended judgment, is repugnant to the natural man. Belief is an independent joy to him. "
William Minto was married to Cornelia Beatrice, daughter of the Rev. Lewis Griffiths, rector of Swindon, Gloucestershire. They had two sons.