The Judges of England: With Sketches of Their Lives, and Miscellaneous Notices Connected with the Courts at Westminster, from the Time of the Conquest, Volume 8Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1864 |
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Page 24
... took too prominent a part in these proceedings , and it may not be improbable that the extremes to which their animosity was carried , hur- ried on the Rebellion of 1715. To his energetic representation to the king may perhaps be ...
... took too prominent a part in these proceedings , and it may not be improbable that the extremes to which their animosity was carried , hur- ried on the Rebellion of 1715. To his energetic representation to the king may perhaps be ...
Page 27
... took place in 1686 or 1687 , when he was two or three - and - twenty , and the intercourse between them seems to have been most affectionate and uninterrupted . If he had two children by Miss Culling before his marriage with Miss Booth ...
... took place in 1686 or 1687 , when he was two or three - and - twenty , and the intercourse between them seems to have been most affectionate and uninterrupted . If he had two children by Miss Culling before his marriage with Miss Booth ...
Page 37
... took up his residence in Powis House , Lincoln's Inn Fields.2 Of his professional exertions while at the bar there is little Burnet , v . 10 , 48 , 287 , 345 ; Parl . Hist . vi . 264 , 778 ; Luttrell , vi . 442 . 2 State Trials , xv ...
... took up his residence in Powis House , Lincoln's Inn Fields.2 Of his professional exertions while at the bar there is little Burnet , v . 10 , 48 , 287 , 345 ; Parl . Hist . vi . 264 , 778 ; Luttrell , vi . 442 . 2 State Trials , xv ...
Page 46
... took , except in the proceedings against Dr. Sacheverell . He owed his first election probably to the interest of the Duke of Devonshire , as his colleague was Lord James Cavendish , and as in the previous June he was by the ...
... took , except in the proceedings against Dr. Sacheverell . He owed his first election probably to the interest of the Duke of Devonshire , as his colleague was Lord James Cavendish , and as in the previous June he was by the ...
Page 51
... took means to conceal the losses that occasionally occurred , there is too much evidence . Though therefore his friends might assert that he was made to suffer for a system of which he was not the author , and which had been knowingly ...
... took means to conceal the losses that occasionally occurred , there is too much evidence . Though therefore his friends might assert that he was made to suffer for a system of which he was not the author , and which had been knowingly ...
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afterwards Anne appointed April attorney attorney-general barrister Bathurst became bencher born brother buried Burnet called career Charles Charles Yorke chief baron circuit Clive coif Common Pleas death died Duke Earl Edward elected eloquence eminent Erskine estates Exchequer Eyre father February Fortescue Gent George II Henry Hist honour House of Commons House of Lords Inner Temple James January judge judicial June king King's Bench king's counsel knighted latter lawyer Lincoln's Lincoln's Inn Lord Campbell lord chancellor Lord Cowper Lord Hardwicke lord keeper Lord Mansfield Lord Raymond Lord Thurlow Macclesfield married master Middle Temple ministry months Motto November Parker Parl parliament patent peerage Pitt presided profession promotion Queen received recorder Reign of George retirement Richard Seal seat serjeant Sir John Sir Robert Sir Thomas Sir William solicitor-general soon succeeded took Trevor Trials vice Westminster Hall Whig wife
Popular passages
Page 101 - And he said, Who told thee that thou wast naked? Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat? And the man said, The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat.
Page 40 - Here lies the friend most lov'd, the son most dear: Who ne'er knew joy, but friendship might divide, Or gave his father grief but when he died. How vain is reason, eloquence how weak ! If Pope must tell what Harcourt cannot speak. Oh, let thy once-lov'd friend inscribe thy stone, And with a father's sorrows mix his own...
Page 100 - The laws of God and man both give the party an opportunity to make his defence, if he has any. I remember to have heard it observed by a very learned man, upon such an occasion, that even God himself did not pass sentence upon Adam before he was called upon to make his defence. 'Adam' (says God), 'where art thou? Hast thou not eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?' And the same question was put to Eve also.
Page 132 - An Enquiry into the Constitution, Discipline, Unity and Worship of the Primitive Church that flourished within the first three hundred years after Christ.
Page 280 - If there be yet amongst us the power of freely discussing the acts of our rulers ; if there be yet the privilege of meeting for the promotion of needful reforms ; if he who desires wholesome changes in our Constitution be still recognized as a patriot, and not doomed to die the death of a traitor ; let us acknowledge with gratitude, that to this great man, under Heaven, we owe this felicity of the times.
Page 361 - of BUTLER. " I distinctly remember," says he, " Lord Camden 's presiding in the Court of Chancery. His Lordship's judicial eloquence was of the colloquial kind — extremely simple, — diffuse, but not desultory. He introduced legal idioms frequently, and always with a pleasing and great effect. Sometimes, however, he rose to the sublime strains of eloquence ; but the sublimity was altogether in the sentiment ; the diction retained its simplicity ; this increased the effect.
Page 131 - James's." reduction of the national debt, "He might as well have attempted to stop the middle arch of Blackfriars Bridge with his full-bottomed wig.
Page 226 - Leech made a speech, Angry, neat, and wrong ; Mr. Hart, on the other part, Was right, but dull and long : Mr. Parker made that darker Which was dark enough without ; Mr. Cook quoted his book ; And the Chancellor said, I DOUBT.
Page 266 - I have seen him," says Lord Eldon, " come into court with both hands wrapped up in flannel (from gout). He could not take a note, and had no one to do so for him. I have known him try a cause which lasted nine or ten hours, and then, from memory, sum up all the evidence with the greatest correctness.
Page 298 - The promptitude and wisdom of your decisions have been as highly conducive to the benefit of the suitor, as they have been eminently promotive of the general administration of equity. In the performance of your important and arduous duties, you have exhibited an uninterrupted equanimity, and displayed a temper never disturbed and a patience never wearied : you have evinced an uniform and impartial attention to those engaged in the discharge of their professional duties here, and who have had the...