Law and Lawyers: Curious Facts and Characteristic Sketches |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 69
Page 1
... Court Changing Names Charles I. and the Law Choice of a Judge , A Woman's A PAGE 150 17 131 129 7 22 69 141 147 101 9 153 141 40 44 12 20 103 107 44 46 18 11 111 117 34 53 10 41 136 118 51 44 68 114 116 Classical Deference of Swift ...
... Court Changing Names Charles I. and the Law Choice of a Judge , A Woman's A PAGE 150 17 131 129 7 22 69 141 147 101 9 153 141 40 44 12 20 103 107 44 46 18 11 111 117 34 53 10 41 136 118 51 44 68 114 116 Classical Deference of Swift ...
Page 2
... Courts of Appeal , Ecclesiastical . PAGE 22 34 19 72 64 Curran and the Farmer , 30 ; and the Judge , 26 ; and the Mastiff , 54 ; at a Debating Society , 42 ; Gratitude to Boyse , 28 ; " High Ecclesiastical Authority , " 138 ; Lucky ...
... Courts of Appeal , Ecclesiastical . PAGE 22 34 19 72 64 Curran and the Farmer , 30 ; and the Judge , 26 ; and the Mastiff , 54 ; at a Debating Society , 42 ; Gratitude to Boyse , 28 ; " High Ecclesiastical Authority , " 138 ; Lucky ...
Page 3
... Court , 93 ; Value in Society 36 Left in the Right . Legal Courtship , A 139 21 " Legal Pearl Divers Lively Retort , A Longest Lawsuit , The 67 70 32 Malady , A Counsel's , Solved Marketing Chief - Justice , A Musical Comparison , A ...
... Court , 93 ; Value in Society 36 Left in the Right . Legal Courtship , A 139 21 " Legal Pearl Divers Lively Retort , A Longest Lawsuit , The 67 70 32 Malady , A Counsel's , Solved Marketing Chief - Justice , A Musical Comparison , A ...
Page 7
... Court of Star Chamber seems to have been , or pretended to be , a careful guardian of private morals ; for it desired the principals of the Inns of Court and Chancery not to suffer the gentlemen students to be out of their houses after ...
... Court of Star Chamber seems to have been , or pretended to be , a careful guardian of private morals ; for it desired the principals of the Inns of Court and Chancery not to suffer the gentlemen students to be out of their houses after ...
Page 9
... Court of Common Pleas , he very civilly asked him to drink some liquor . While the man was drinking , Davy contrived to heat a poker , and then asking what the parchment process was made of , and being answered , of sheepskin , he told ...
... Court of Common Pleas , he very civilly asked him to drink some liquor . While the man was drinking , Davy contrived to heat a poker , and then asking what the parchment process was made of , and being answered , of sheepskin , he told ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
afterwards anecdote answer asked assizes attended attorney barrister Bishop brought Cæsar called cause Chancery character Charles Chief Justice clerk client cloth extra Crown Curran death defendant dinner Duke Dunning Edition eminent Erskine ERSKINE'S exclaimed Fitzgibbon Foundling Hospital gentleman gilt edges give Gray's Inn hand hear Henry honour HORNE TOOKE House humour Illustrations Inner Temple Inns of Court instantly Irish Jefferies JOSEPH HUME judge Julius Cæsar jury KENYON King King's Bench lady lawyer leading counsel learned lived Lord Brougham Lord Chancellor Lord Chief Lord Eldon Lord Ellenborough Lord Thurlow lordship Master morning never NIMMO'S observed occasion once opinion parliament person plaintiff plead poor Princess Princess of Wales prisoner profession question recollect remarkable replied says sent sentence sheriff Sir John Sir William Southfleet speak Star Chamber tell Temple thought told trial verdict Warren witness woman words writ young
Popular passages
Page 149 - And I looked, and behold a pale horse : and his name that sat on him was Death, and hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth.
Page 80 - I find His Grace my very good lord indeed, and I believe he doth as singularly favour me as any subject within this Realm; howbeit, son Roper, I may tell thee I have no cause to be proud thereof, for if my head would win him a castle in France (for then there was war between us), it should not fail to go.
Page 38 - He rose slowly from his seat : he left the woolsack with deliberation ; but he went not to the nearest place, like ordinary Chancellors, the sons of mortal men ; he drew back by a pace or two, and, standing as it were askance, and partly behind the huge bale he had quitted for a season, he began to pour out, first in a growl, and then in a clear and louder roll, the matter which he had to deliver, and which for the most part consisted in some positive assertions, some personal vituperation, some...
Page 125 - I am worn to death ; here have we been, sitting on in the vacation, from nine in the morning until four, and when we leave this place I have to read through all my papers to be ready for to-morrow morning; but the most extraordinary part of all is, that Eldon, who has not only mine, but all the other business to go through, is just as cheerful and untired as ever.
Page 85 - Both these might be performed by deputy; but the principal was to answer for the success of the trial, the deputy only venturing some corporal pain for hire, or perhaps for friendship.
Page 26 - Page, who, joined to the other judges, Serjeants, and benchers present, danced, or rather walked, round about the coal fire, according to the old ceremony, three times, during which they were aided in the figure of the dance by Mr. George Cooke, the prothonotary, then...