Principles & Methods of University Reform; Being a Letter Addressed to the University of Oxford

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A more daring suggestion is to divide Scholarships and To make Exhibitions into two classes, (1) Honorary, and carrying g^jp"*"^" no emoluments, to be competed for by the clever and well- honorary, to-do ; (3) Eleemosynary, to be competed for or enjoyed by the poor. No proposal that would involve the revival of paid Scholars as an inferior order or renew distinctions between classes resting solely on wealth is likely, I think, to find permanent favour in Oxford, even if it were not detrimental,
... as this must be, to the general standard of learning. A variation of this idea is to treat all Scholar- ships as University Prizes, but without emolument, to invite rich and poor alike to compete for them as they do now, and then in the case of the poor prize-winner, but of him alone, to endow the prize with £20 or £50 or £80 or £100 per annum according to the measure of his need.
I say nothing of the difficulty of carrying such a pecuniary discrimination into effect, but it is surely very doubtful whether the effort altogether to sever honour from emolu- ment is capable of being attended with success.


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