The Scotsman

War poets honoured with violins to mark anniversar­y

● Owen, Graves and Sassoon met in capital in 1917

- By LUCINDA CAMERON

A violin-maker has crafted three violins from a tree in the grounds of a shell-shock treatment hospital in honour of three renowned First World War poets.

Steve Burnett used a branch from a sycamore tree at Craiglockh­art military war hospital, where Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon were treated, to make the instrument­s.

He also recently completed a violin in honour of poet Robert Graves, who met Owen

GLASGOW

and Sassoon in Edinburgh. The three violins were played together for the first time on Friday evening at Baberton Golf Club in Edinburgh as a plaque was unveiled to mark 100 years since the three poets met there.

Mr Burnett hopes the instrument­s will serve as envoys for peace and reconcilia­tion through the power of music.

He said: “I hope that as time goes on the voices of these violins through the messages of these poets will be a beacon of hope.

“The violins will be there to spread the word of hope and peace and harmony.”

Mr Burnett has long admired Wilfred Owen and made the first violin in 2014 to mark the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War.

He has collaborat­ed with Edinburgh-based Scottish violinist/composer Thoren Ferguson, who has played the Wilfred Owen violin to thousands of people around the country, both in First World War commemorat­ion events and on national radio.

The instrument has also been endorsed as an envoy for peace by Unicef goodwill ambassador the violinist/conductor Maxim Vengerov and has been played by violinist Nigel Kennedy.

Siegfried Sassoon was sent to Craiglockh­art Hospital, now Napier University, in 1917, arriving in the summer of that year.

Owen was also being treated there and introduced himself to Sassoon around 20 August, 1917.

Mr Burnett began work on the Siegfried Sassoon violin earlier this year, using wood from the same branch, to mark the centenary of the first meeting between the two poets that August.

In April 2017, research by Aberdeen University lecturer Neil Mclennan revealed that Owen and Sassoon met with fellow poet Robert Graves at Baberton Golf Club in October 1917.

When he heard about this, Mr Burnett decided to make a third instrument, the Robert Graves violin, to mark 100 years since that meeting.

 ??  ?? 0 From left, violin-maker Steve Burnett with the Siegfried Sassoon violin, historian Neil Mclennan, with the Robert Graves violin and fiddle player Thoren Ferguson holding the Wilfred Owen violin at Baberton Golf Club in Edinburgh
0 From left, violin-maker Steve Burnett with the Siegfried Sassoon violin, historian Neil Mclennan, with the Robert Graves violin and fiddle player Thoren Ferguson holding the Wilfred Owen violin at Baberton Golf Club in Edinburgh

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