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Thomas Blacklock (1721—1791)
Scottish
poet, the son of a bricklayer, was born at Annan, in Dumfriesshire,
in 1721. When not quite six months old he lost his sight by smallpox,
and his career is largely interesting as that of one who achieved
what he did in spite of blindness. Shortly after his father’s
death in 1740, some of Blacklock’s poems began to be passed around
among his acquaintances and friends, who arranged or his education
at the grammar-school, and subsequently at the university of Edinburgh,
where he was a student of divinity.
His
first volume of Poems was published in 1746. In 1754 he became
deputy librarian for the Faculty of Advocates, by the kindness
of Hume. He was eventually estranged from Hume, and defended James
Beattie’s attack on that philosopher. Blacklock was among the
first friends of Burns in Edinburgh, being one of the earliest
to recognize his genius. He was in 1762 ordained minister of the
church of Kirkcudbright, a position which he soon resigned; in
1767 the degree of doctor in divinity was conferred on him by
Marischal College, Aberdeen. He died on :be 7th of July 1791.
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