Westminster Hall: Or, Professional Relics and Anecdotes of the Bar, Bench, and Woolsack, Volume 3J. Knight & H. Lacey, 1825 |
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Westminster Hall: Or, Professional Relics and Anecdotes of the Bar, Bench ... Visualização integral - 1825 |
Westminster Hall: Or, Professional Relics and Anecdotes of the Bar ..., Volume 3 Henry Roscoe Visualização integral - 1825 |
Westminster Hall: Or, Professional Relics and Anecdotes of the Bar ..., Volume 3 Henry Roscoe Visualização integral - 1825 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
afterwards amongst annum answer appears authority Bacon Baron Barristers Benchers biography called cause Chancery character Coke's Common Law Common Pleas counsel Curran dance Dauncey dinner Duke Earl eminent England Exchequer father favour gentlemen Hale Hall hath Henry Henry VIII honour Igno Inner Temple Inns of Chancery Inns of Court John Judge Jury King King's Bench Lady lawyers learned Lord Chancellor Lord Chief Justice Lord Hardwicke Lord Holles Lord Keeper Lord Mansfield Lordship Majesty manner Master Memoirs ment never observed occasion opinion parliament period person practice Preface present Prince profession published reader Reports Revels ring Roger North royal says Scroggs Seal Selden Sergeant shillings Sir Edward Coke Sir Samuel Romilly Sir Thomas Sir William Sir William Blackstone Sir William Jones Society solemn statute Temple thought tion took trial utter barrister wager Westminster year-books
Passagens conhecidas
Página 40 - Of these the false Achitophel was first, A name to all succeeding ages cursed; For close designs and crooked counsels fit, Sagacious, bold, and turbulent of wit; Restless, unfix'd in principles and place, In power unpleased, impatient of disgrace; A fiery soul, which, working out, its way, Fretted the pigmy body to decay, And o'er-inform'd the tenement of clay.
Página 40 - With public zeal to cancel private crimes. How safe is treason, and how sacred ill, Where none can sin against the people's will! Where crowds can wink, and no offence be known. Since in another's guilt they find their own!
Página 156 - ... the little he knew, and the little good that was in him, to the friendships and conversation he had still been used to, of the most excellent men in their several kinds that lived in that age : by whose learning, and information, and instruction, he formed his studies, and mended his understanding : and by whose gentleness and sweetness of behaviour, and justice, and virtue, and example, he formed his manners, subdued that pride, and suppressed that heat and passion he was naturally inclined...
Página 112 - To which it was answered by me, that true it was that God had endowed his Majesty with excellent science and great endowments of nature, but his Majesty was not learned in the laws of his realm of England ; and causes which concern the life or inheritance or goods or fortunes of his subjects are not to be decided by natural reason but by the artificial reason and judgment of law, which law is an act which requires long study and experience before that a man can attain to the cognizance of it...
Página 159 - ... in his conversation he was the most clear discourser, and had the best faculty of making hard things easy, and presenting them to the understanding, of any man that hath been known.
Página 156 - Selden was a person whom no character can flatter, or transmit in any expressions equal to his merit and virtue. He was of so stupendous learning in all kinds and in all languages, (as may appear in his excellent and transcendent writings,) that a man would have thought he had been entirely conversant amongst books, and had never spent an hour but in reading and writing...
Página 10 - I say no more, but that, to give every man his due, had it not been for Sir Edward Coke's Reports, (which though they may have errors, and some peremptory and extrajudicial resolutions more than are warranted ; yet they contain infinite good decisions, and rulings over of cases,) the law, by this time, had been almost like a ship without ballast ; for that the cases of modern experience are fled from those that are adjudged and ruled in former time.
Página 159 - ... his humanity, courtesy, and affability was such, that he would have been thought to have been bred in the best courts, but that his good nature, charity, and delight in doing good, and in communicating all he knew, exceeded that breeding.
Página 112 - King said, that he thought the law was founded upon reason, and that he and others had reason, as well as the Judges: to which it was answered by me, that true it was, that God had endowed His Majesty with excellent science, and great endowments of nature; but His Majesty was not learned in the laws of his realm of England, and causes which concern the life, or inheritance, or goods, or fortunes of his subjects...
Página 259 - That certainly would Verus. I have seen an old trial where he sat Judge on two of them ; one was called Tricktrack, the other Tear-shift : one was a learned judge of sharpers ; the other the quickest of all men at finding out a wench. Trick-track never spared a pickpocket, but was a companion to cheats ; Tear-shift would make compliments to wenches 'of quality, but certainly commit poor ones.