26 OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. I-BOOKI. he had himself been a sizar, and that it had not availed to withhold from him the friendship of the great and the good. His counsel prevailed. The youth went to Dublin, showed by passing the necessary examination that his time at school had not been altogether thrown away, and on the llth of June 1745 was admitted, last in the list of eight who so presented themselves, a sizar of Trinity College; *—there most speedily to earn that experience, which, on his elder brother afterwards consulting him. as to the education of his son, prompted him to answer thus : " If he has ambition, strong " passions, and an exquisite sensibility of contempt, do not " send him to your college, unless you have no other trade " for him except your own."t Flood, who was then in the college, does not seem to have noticed Goldsmith: but a greater than Flood, though himself little notable at college, said he perfectly recollected his old fellow-student, when they afterwards met at the house of Mr. Eeynolds. Not that there was much for an Edmund Burke to recollect of him. Little went well with Goldsmith in his student course, He had a menial position, a savage brute for tutor, and few inclinations to the study exacted. He was not indeed, as perhaps never living creature in this world was, without his consolations; he could sing a song well, and, at a new insult or outrage, could blow off excitement through his flute with a kind of des- perate •'mechanical vehemence*" At the worst lie had, as * Percy Memoir, 14-, 15. " His being admitted a sizar in Trinity College, Dublin, " at that early age, denotes a remarkable proficiency. Sizars there are expected to "come better prepared than other boys, and therefore usually apply for admission " somewhat later in life." A sizarsMp might in other words be called an inferior scholarship, disposed of in like manner to the best answerer, •|- See post, Book II. Chap. v. h- used to relate, im tfais beaeieeflt parpose."