Blaze was one of the first group of students to study at
Trinity College, Kandy (then known as the Trinity College and Collegiate School), at the time of the founding of the school by
Rev. Richard Collins for the
Church Mission Society in 1872. Whilst at Trinity he produced a school magazine, which appeared in manuscript form, on 15 May 1876, and later issued fortnightly as
The Gleaner. In 1880 at age nineteen he passed the first examination in Arts at the
University of Calcutta, following which he took up an appointment as the
head master of the lower school at Trinity College. Uncertain as to whether his career lay in education he resigned a month later to become a law student however he was more interested in literature and cultivated a talent for writing poetry. In December 1882 he returned to Calcutta completing his
Bachelor of Arts examination at the University. Between 1883 and 1890 Blaze taught for nearly two years in Calcutta, first at the
Bishop’s College and then at
St. James' School. After that he served as a second master and as acting head master at the
Boys High School in
Lahore. In these years, he read numerous works and found inspiration in the life and works of Dr.
Thomas Arnold (1795–1842) the headmaster of
Rugby School. In this respect he wrote, "Anecdotes of Eaton, Harrow and Winchester which I eagerly read and remembered revealed much and their school songs stirred me deeply, as indeed they stir all youthful souls". Then he thought of founding a public school by himself, writing "
What disturbed me in Ceylon schools and in all other schools known to me were the strange distance between Teacher and Pupil and the needlessly hostile relations that existed between them. Another thing that I specially disliked was the craze for judging the merits of a school by the examination results." He returned to Ceylon in January 1891. == Kingswood College ==