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PROFESSOR BLACKIE ON BAZAARS AND BEGGING.

The Edinburgh University Students' Club Bazaar™ opened by Dean Montgomery. Professor Blackie was also present and delivered an address. He declared theßazaar was not open for business till his speech was delivered, (Laughter.) Ho did not want, however, to make a speech, as there was too much random talking at the present time, for which reason, being rather too much accustomed to public speaking—(loud laughter)—and being dragged into all kinds of companies except investment companies, with which he had no connection—he had pertinaciously and persistently refused to have anything to do with opening bazaars. He did not get the reputation of being the promoter of every man's schemedaughter)—and it was a bad reputation to get, and if one wis always talking they would be sure to say something wrong, which would be reported in the papers, and he would be called a general cracker of jokes and a consummate intellectual fool. (Laughter.) They must, therefore, understand that on the present occasion he exercised a great deal of self-denial, and this was positively the last time. (Loud laughter,) People should not always be talking. He thought Gladstone had hurt himself by that, but he (Professor Blackie) was not a politician, only a professor, and he could say what he pleased, and didn't care a snuff for either Whigs or Tories, Established or any Churchman. (Laughter.) Some people had a very' peculiar kind of conscience that was like a too susceptible eye, which could not bear the light, and thus rendered its possessor as blind as he that was sightless. They did not think it was proper to have bazaars. As for himself, he considered it was the proper thing to spoil the Egyptians on all occasions. No bettor thing could be done than taking money out of people's pockets for a good object. He himself was perhaps the most expert beggar, excepting perhaps the Free Church beggars—(loud laughter)—the most expert and successful beggar that had appeared in this part of the world, actually doing a kind of half-thief—(re-newed laughter)—doing things liko old' Jacob, adopting all kinds of shifts which a person with a very tender conscience would not adopt, in order to conjure money out of the pockets of fellows who would rather not give it. He thought that women should do something in the way of opening bazaars and expounding their philosophy now-a-days when they were getting so masculine as to have M.D. after their name, but he supposed they spoke gently and in a more insinuating way at their own tables, not only with their mouths, but with their eyes, aye, with their fingers, with a gentle touch. (Laughter.). He believed the ladies were wise in their generation, He could not, however, be called upon to speak of a bazaar with the objects of which he more thoroughly sympathised. Scotch students were hard working fellows he knew. They worked too much alone, They did not even know their fellows in the same class, aye, sometimes they wouldn't know them —those fine Edinburgh gentlemen belonging to aristocratic society, sons of my lord this or that, who considered themselves defiled by touching a dirty stupid Highlander. Sometimes this might be excused because there were dirty fellows, and by historical reputation the Scotch was a dirty animal.. (Sensation,) These fine people forgot they were only half redeemed from the uureasoning beast—oil I fie for shame—(laughter)—they sat at meat by themselves, which was a si?n of the savage animal which retired to a hole and devoured its bone by itself. (Loud laughter,) Eating together was a sign of the human being intellectual, He didn't think he could digest his beefsteak if it were not for his wife and sisters-in-law and the other women, and they spent three-quarters of an hour over a simple meal. Coming down from the dais on which he was mounted, the Professor said—now that is Professor Blackie's speech. ■

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18790421.2.10

Bibliographic details

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 2, Issue 139, 21 April 1879, Page 2

Word Count
655

PROFESSOR BLACKIE ON BAZAARS AND BEGGING. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 2, Issue 139, 21 April 1879, Page 2

PROFESSOR BLACKIE ON BAZAARS AND BEGGING. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 2, Issue 139, 21 April 1879, Page 2

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