What the Judge Thought |
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Page 255
1 145 r eyes he cha die OD : Whe given against him you will find little to censure from the standpoint of latter - day bureaucracy . Yet his actions created in the minds of many of his fellow - citizens bitter hatred and loathing .
1 145 r eyes he cha die OD : Whe given against him you will find little to censure from the standpoint of latter - day bureaucracy . Yet his actions created in the minds of many of his fellow - citizens bitter hatred and loathing .
Page 256
( is impossible to - day to regard his death as anything but a judicial murder . Yet the lesson of the tragedy has a grave meaning for modern Englishmen . The tendency of tired nations to hand over their liberties to officials ...
( is impossible to - day to regard his death as anything but a judicial murder . Yet the lesson of the tragedy has a grave meaning for modern Englishmen . The tendency of tired nations to hand over their liberties to officials ...
Page 262
Every author who writes of greyhounds breathes the joy and enthusiasm of the coursing field : from the eloquent and philosophic Flavius Arrianus - who in the days of Hadrian tells us that the sport of coursing and the breeding and ...
Every author who writes of greyhounds breathes the joy and enthusiasm of the coursing field : from the eloquent and philosophic Flavius Arrianus - who in the days of Hadrian tells us that the sport of coursing and the breeding and ...
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Contents
CHAPTER | 27 |
CONCERNING LEGAL OUTPATIENTS | 44 |
CONCERNING DANIEL OCONNELL | 57 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action advocate allowed appear asked believe called cause Choate circuit citizens common considered continued costs counsel County Court course debt defendant doubt duty evidence eyes fact friends give given golf ball hand hear heard High Court Home honour human hundred Indictment interest judge Jumbo jury justice known lawyers learned letter Lincoln litigation living look Lord lost matter Maule means mind nature never O'Connell official once Orders in Council passed person picture play poor practice present prisoner profession question reason reform remain remember rule Ruskin seems side speak spirit story success tell testimony things thought to-day told trial true truth turned understand Whistler witness writes young
References to this book
The Evidence of Children: The Law and the Psychology John R. Spencer,Rhona H. Flin Snippet view - 1990 |