Westminster Hall, Or, Professional Relics and Anecdotes of the Bar, Bench, and Woolsack, Volume 2J. Knight & H. Lacey, 1825 - Law |
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Page 67
... . In consequence of the first letter , your Grace went into the Park on horseback , and was there some time without seeing any body you sus- pected ; were there not people there D. of Marlb . I saw several people on horse- F 2 LAWYERS . 67.
... . In consequence of the first letter , your Grace went into the Park on horseback , and was there some time without seeing any body you sus- pected ; were there not people there D. of Marlb . I saw several people on horse- F 2 LAWYERS . 67.
Page 68
... Marlb . No , nothing in the world as I it was a very cold day . saw ; Q. Your Lordship said there was another per ... Marlb . I cannot tell exactly . I had spoke to him to keep a great way off . Q. Was he in view of your Grace ? D. of ...
... Marlb . No , nothing in the world as I it was a very cold day . saw ; Q. Your Lordship said there was another per ... Marlb . I cannot tell exactly . I had spoke to him to keep a great way off . Q. Was he in view of your Grace ? D. of ...
Page 69
... Marlb . I had ; I stood by him in hopes he would speak to me , if he was the person that wrote the letters . Q. Whether the circumstance was not such , that that other person might very well believe your Grace wanted to speak to the ...
... Marlb . I had ; I stood by him in hopes he would speak to me , if he was the person that wrote the letters . Q. Whether the circumstance was not such , that that other person might very well believe your Grace wanted to speak to the ...
Page 70
... Marlb . No , I don't think I did . Counsel . With respect to the third letter , your Grace heard no more of that till the fourth came ? D. of Marlb . I did not ; and when the fourth came , I sent to Mr. Barnard . Q. Did your Grace know ...
... Marlb . No , I don't think I did . Counsel . With respect to the third letter , your Grace heard no more of that till the fourth came ? D. of Marlb . I did not ; and when the fourth came , I sent to Mr. Barnard . Q. Did your Grace know ...
Page 71
... Marlb . No. Q. Nor in the Abbey ? D. of Marlb . No. Q. Your Grace mentioned , he said , It is very odd , my father was out of town then ! Could your Grace apply that , in the manner it was spoke , that his father was out of town when ...
... Marlb . No. Q. Nor in the Abbey ? D. of Marlb . No. Q. Your Grace mentioned , he said , It is very odd , my father was out of town then ! Could your Grace apply that , in the manner it was spoke , that his father was out of town when ...
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Abbey afterwards appear attended Attorney authority Bacon Bettesworth Brunell called Chancellor Chancery character Chester circumstances common law confessed Court death defendant Duke Duke of Marlborough Dunmow Dutton Earl eminent English father gave gentleman give Grace guilty guineas Hale Hall hath Hickeringill honour Inns of Court James Jefferies John Jones judge judgment Jury King King's Bench lawyer learned letter Lord Camden Lord Keeper Lord Mansfield Lord Somers Lord Thurlow lords and gentlemen Lordship magistrate manner Mansfield Marlb master mind never observed occasion Parliament person pillory pleaded prisoner prisoner's profession punishment racter reign Roger North roogs sent Sergeant shew singular Sir Thomas Sir William Sir William Jones speak statute stood Swift talents tell thing thought tion took trial verdict Westminster Westminster Hall witness Woolsack words
Popular passages
Page 228 - He was bred to the law, which is, in my opinion, one of the first and noblest of human sciences ; a science which does more to quicken and invigorate the understanding, than all the other kinds of learning put together ; but it is not apt, except in persons very happily born, to open and to liberalize the mind exactly in the same proportion.
Page 40 - Some natural tears they dropt, but wiped them soon: The world was all before them, where to choose Their place of rest, and Providence their guide. They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow, Through Eden took their solitary way.
Page 59 - I am desperate, and must be provided for ; you have it in your power ; it is my business to make it your inclination to...
Page 226 - The color of our whole life is generally such as the three or four first years in which we are our own masters, make it. Then it is that we may be said to shape our own destiny, and to treasure up for ourselves a series of future successes or disappointments. Had I employed my time as wisely as you, in a situation very similar to yours, I had never been a poet perhaps, but I might by this time have acquired a character of more importance in society, and a situation in which my friends would have...
Page 135 - It is proper for a woman, after her husband's death, to burn herself in the fire with his corpse...
Page 58 - As ceremony is an idle thing upon most occasions, more especially to persons in my state of mind, I shall proceed immediately to acquaint you with the motive and end of addressing this epistle to you, which is equally interesting to us both. You are to know then, that my present situation in life is such, that I should prefer annihilation to a continuance in it. Desperate diseases require desperate remedies; and you are the man I have pitched upon, either to make me or unmake yourself.
Page 240 - Bench; but the attorneys of the Common Pleas often retained him to move for them in the treasury, such matters as were proper there, and what they might have moved themselves. But however agreeable this kind of practice was to a novitiate, it was not worthy the observation it had; for once or twice a week was the utmost calculate of these motions. But the...
Page 286 - An old dull sot, who told the clock, For many years, at Bridewell -dock, At Westminster, and Hick's-hall, And hiccius doctius play'd in all ; 580 Where, in all governments and times, H...
Page 274 - Jennings, whose conduct had long been very suspicious ; he had long before dark sent him out to change a guinea for him, and that he had only come back since he (the gentleman) was in the house, saying he could not get change...
Page 101 - It was our wish to have waited personally upon your Lordship in a body, to have taken our public leave of you, on your retiring from the office of Chief Justice of England ; but judging of your Lordship's feelings upon such an occasion by our own, and considering, besides, that our numbers might be inconvenient, we desire, in this manner, affectionately to assure your Lordship, that we regret, with a just sensibility, the loss of a magistrate whose conspicuous and exalted talents conferred dignity...