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WILLIAM BURTO Obituary

BURTO--William Charles. William Charles Burto died peacefully in his sleep in Cambridge Massachusetts, on July 5, after five years of treatment for multiple myeloma. Born in North Creek, New York, in 1921, Burto graduated from Colgate University in 1942, where he had become a New York State Collegiate Champion skier. In his senior year he was accepted into Harvard's Ph.D. program in English literature, but upon receiving his undergraduate degree he immediately volunteered for service in the Navy. He saw action in both the Atlantic and Pacific, surviving the sinking of his ship at Guadalcanal in 1943. (He was on the bridge of the ship, operating radar equipment, when a bomb killed the captain, a few yards away). At the end of World War II he entered the graduate program at Harvard, assisted by the G.I. Bill, but in 1948 he took a two-year leave of absence to teach English at the University of Iowa, in Iowa City. He then returned to Harvard, completed his Ph.D. in 1954, and began teaching at Lowell State College, soon to become part of the University of Massachusetts, where he served as chair of the Department of English. In 1982 he retired. Burto was the co-author (with Sylvan Barnet, Morton Berman, William E. Cain, and Marcia Stubbs) of several highly successful college textbooks on literature, drama, and composition. He was also the editor of the Signet Classic Edition of Shakespeare's sonnets (with an introduction by W.H. Auden) and of Shakespeare's narrative poems (with an introduction by William Empson). In 1963 he and Sylvan Barnet (his partner since 1952) became interested in Japanese art, especially early calligraphy and Buddhist art, and in subsequent years they assembled a collection that has been exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), the Metropolitan Museum, the Freer/Sackler Galleries, and the Harvard Art Museum. The Metropolitan exhibition was accompanied by a catalog, The Written Image: Japanese Calligraphy and Painting (2002) by Miyeko Murase and others. As an octogenarian and then a nonagenarian he occasionally reflected on his life (especially his survival at Guadalcanal) and his imminent death; at such moments he always remarked that he had been extremely fortunate in being long-lived and very happy. A devoted gardener as well as a serious collector of art, he cherished lines by Walter Savage Landor (who lived a mere 89 years): "Nature I loved and, next to Nature, Art:/I warmed both hands before the fire of life;/It sinks, and I am ready to depart." William Burto is survived by Barnet, by a niece, Sheila Wilson, and by five Geraghty nephews, Elihu, Ennis, Jonathan, Kevin, and Sean. We wish to express our deepest gratitude to Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates and to VNA Care Network and Hospice for their unstinting tender support.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by New York Times on Jul. 14, 2013.

Memories and Condolences
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October 8, 2014

I just found this obit. Dr. Burto was my professor in 1970-71, and it was a privilege. He was one of the best teachers I ever had, and even today as I teach, I try to pepper my classes with a fact, story, anecdote from another subject area or from life experience to motivate my students as he did me. My condolences to Prof. Barnet.

August 5, 2013

I was a student at Lowell State in 1954-1959 and was privileged to be in his classes. He was a gifted teacher and a lovely person. He was very generous in his willingness to help me with my creative writing. Please accept my condolences.
Anne Gardner-Kaihlanen

Elizabeth Donaghey

July 30, 2013

I was a Dr. Burto groupie from 1978-1982. He was an exceptional professor who brought literature to life. He was a gift to his students. He had such dignity and grace and made us fall deeper in love with books and learning in every class he taught.

July 24, 2013

Bill Burto was an accomplished gardener and devotee of hostas—which are native to Japan. As a copy editor of The Hosta Journal (the publication of the American Hosta Society) he took the homespun prose of gardeners from around the world and made them sound positively lyrical—while maintaining their “voice'. His small Cambridge garden was packed with the choicest hostas purchased from boutique specialty nurseries, given by friends and personally gathered in the wilds of Japan's rugged mountains and remote offshore islands. And he will be remembered just as much as the perpetually upbeat self-effacing man who had a gift for encouraging young gardeners and making friends.

Bob Olson, Minneapolis MN

Valerie Doran

July 18, 2013

I had the privilege of visiting Prof. Burto and Prof. Barnet in their home in Cambridge and spending a wonderful day with them, viewing the beautiful artworks in their home and being as fascinated by their collection of photographs of Sugimoto as by their exquisite works of calligraphy, and somewhat unexpectedly discussing whether the jargon of contemporary critical theory is justified! I learned so much that day, about taste, graciousness, generosity, not to mention how to make one's opinion known without hitting someone over the head with it. I am so grateful to have been one of those privileged to meet Prof. Burto, and send my heartfelt condolences to Prof. Barnet.

July 17, 2013

Scholar, teacher, friend, gardener, chef,lover of poetry, brave man, his death darkens the world.
Helen Vendler

Nancy Harnden

July 17, 2013

I was an English major at ULowell and I had professor Burto for a Shakespeare course. I remember that the buzz was that he was a great teacher but that it was tough to earn even a B in his class. In fact, what he really expected was that you read the assignments and add something intelligent to the discussions. I am so glad that he was my professor!

July 17, 2013

we all lost avery soulfull man a dear friend and scholar alice and kurt

July 15, 2013

I was so very fortunate to have Dr. Burto as my professor both semesters of my freshman year at ULowell - UMASS Lowell. He was truly one of the greats!! Brilliant, empassioned and genteel. Denise Dunn

Cynthea Bogel

July 14, 2013

I feel very lucky to have known Bill. I cherish our conversations about Buddhist material culture and will miss his insights and questions.

Robert D. Mowry

July 13, 2013

So sad... A dear friend, a true scholar, a Shakespeare authority, a discerning collector, a beloved professor, a kind man, a noble gentleman, and more... Bill's passing leaves us all diminished. If we follow Bill's lead we can carry his legacy forward, making the world a better place. I am privileged to have known you, Bill, and I am honored that you considered me a friend. Good night, Sweet Prince, may flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.

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