The Life of the Right Honourable Sir Edward Coke, Knt., Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, Etc |
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Page 10
... church of St. Andrew ( Blomefield's Norfolk , pp . 806 , 807. Collins , p . 348 . ( m ) Blomefield , p . 808. Collins , p . 349 . ( n ) Stow's Survey of London , book iii . p . 249. Blome- field , p . 808. Biog . Brit . tit . Coke , Sir ...
... church of St. Andrew ( Blomefield's Norfolk , pp . 806 , 807. Collins , p . 348 . ( m ) Blomefield , p . 808. Collins , p . 349 . ( n ) Stow's Survey of London , book iii . p . 249. Blome- field , p . 808. Biog . Brit . tit . Coke , Sir ...
Page 13
... church shows ( y ) . His eldest son , Edward , was made a baronet in 1641 , but the title became extinct in less than a century afterwards , and the estate was devised to the brother of Lord Leicester . We come now to the Holkham branch ...
... church shows ( y ) . His eldest son , Edward , was made a baronet in 1641 , but the title became extinct in less than a century afterwards , and the estate was devised to the brother of Lord Leicester . We come now to the Holkham branch ...
Page 16
... church was repaired and embellished solely at her cost ( i ) . To descant on the varied elegancies of a structure , which is not more the admiration of our countrymen than of foreigners , more pro- perly belongs to the province of ...
... church was repaired and embellished solely at her cost ( i ) . To descant on the varied elegancies of a structure , which is not more the admiration of our countrymen than of foreigners , more pro- perly belongs to the province of ...
Page 34
... church or state . The Speaker on this , in very guarded terms , admitted the importance of the subject , but begged per- mission to consider the purport and details of the bill , which , on a motion for that purpose , was delivered to ...
... church or state . The Speaker on this , in very guarded terms , admitted the importance of the subject , but begged per- mission to consider the purport and details of the bill , which , on a motion for that purpose , was delivered to ...
Page 38
... church were insisted upon by that cautious prelate on Sir Edward Coke's second marriage , and severe censure denounced on his non - compliance with them , the rigour should be rather attributed to the scrupulous ( g ) Life of Bacon ...
... church were insisted upon by that cautious prelate on Sir Edward Coke's second marriage , and severe censure denounced on his non - compliance with them , the rigour should be rather attributed to the scrupulous ( g ) Life of Bacon ...
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Common terms and phrases
accused affair afterwards answer Attorney Attorney-General Bacon's Biog Bishop Blomefield's Norfolk Brit Buckingham Camd censure Chancellor church citing Coke's Detection Coke's Reports Commendams common law Common Pleas conduct counsel Countess of Westmorland Court and Character Crown daughter declared Earl ecclesiastical eminent England Essex Everard Digby favour fortune Franklyn Franklyn's Annals Fuller's Worthies Gunpowder Treason hath Hist Holkham honour House Ibid Judges judgment King James King's Bench King's counsel Lady Hatton Lawrence Tanfield lawyer learned letter Lloyd's Worthies Lond Lord Bacon Lord Coke Lord Keeper Lordship Majestie's Majesty matter ment mentioned never Norfolk Norwich observation occasion offences opinion Parl parliament Parliamentary History person Privy Council privy counsellor Raleigh reason reign Rushworth Sir Edw Sir Edward Coke Sir Francis Sir Thomas Sir Thomas Monson Somerset speech Star Chamber statute Stephens's Introduction tion Trials Whitgift wife Wilson's writer
Popular passages
Page 136 - First, He shall marry into a disgraced house, which in reason of state is never held good. Next, He shall marry into a troubled house of man and wife, which in religion and Christian discretion is disliked. Thirdly, Your Lordship will go near to lose all such your friends as are adverse to Sir Edward Coke ; myself only except, who out of a pure love and thankfulness shall ever be firm to you.
Page 77 - Since the time I missed the Solicitor's place, the rather I think by your means, I cannot expect that you and I shall ever serve as Attorney and Solicitor together ; but either to serve with another upon your remove, or to step into some other course ; so as I am more free than ever I was from any occasion of unworthy conforming myself to you, more than general good manners or your particular good usage shall provoke ; and if you had not been short-sighted in your own fortune, as I think, you might...
Page 76 - I thought best, once for all to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable my law, my experience, my discretion. What it pleaseth you, I pray, think of me: I am one that knows both mine own wants and other men's; and it may be, perchance, that mine mend, and others stand at a stay.
Page 36 - You are great, and therefore have the more enviers, which would be glad to have you paid at another's cost. Since the time I missed the Solicitor's place, the rather I think by your means...
Page 210 - 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...
Page 185 - I think the Duke of Buckingham is the cause of all our miseries ; and till the King be informed thereof, we shall never go out with honour, or sit with honour here. That man is the grievance of grievances. Let us set down the causes of all our disasters, and they will all reflect upon him.
Page 185 - Cook [old Coke upon Lyttleton], overcome with passion, seeing the desolation likely to ensue, was forced to sit down when he began to speak, by the abundance of tears.
Page 201 - It deserveth not to be read in schooles, • But to be freighted in the Ship of Fools.
Page 172 - His incarceration lasted seven months, at first without intercourse with his family or friends, and even when he obtained his discharge in August 1622, the king said 'he was the fittest instrument for a tyrant that ever was in the realm of England,' and ordered him to confine himself to his mansion at Stoke Pogis.
Page 206 - If your majesty, without too much harshness, can continue the place within your own servants, it is best : if not, the man, upon whom the choice is like to fall, which is Coventry,-^ I hold doubtful for your service ; not but that he is a well learned, and an honest man ; but he hath been, as it were, bred by lord Coke, and seasoned in his ways.