The Lives of the Right Hon. Francis North, Baron Guilford; the Hon. Sir Dudley North; and the Hon. and Rev. Dr. John North, Volume 1G. Bell and sons, 1890 |
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Page 1
... party rage . And it must afford no less encouragement to the present age , to follow their steps , when they shall find it is not often that a man of worth appears upon the great stage of the world , but after he has finished the part ...
... party rage . And it must afford no less encouragement to the present age , to follow their steps , when they shall find it is not often that a man of worth appears upon the great stage of the world , but after he has finished the part ...
Page 11
... party of men in his time , then termed the fanatic party ; and those are the chief architects of fame : and having nothing ill to say of him , they would say no good , and therefore chose to say nothing at all . If he had acted in these ...
... party of men in his time , then termed the fanatic party ; and those are the chief architects of fame : and having nothing ill to say of him , they would say no good , and therefore chose to say nothing at all . If he had acted in these ...
Page 39
... parties return to the cupboard , where the mootmen present the benchers with a cup of beer and a slice of bread . " ( Orig . Jurid . p . 209. ) The custom of mooting has been discontinued for upwards of a century . 3 By an order of the ...
... parties return to the cupboard , where the mootmen present the benchers with a cup of beer and a slice of bread . " ( Orig . Jurid . p . 209. ) The custom of mooting has been discontinued for upwards of a century . 3 By an order of the ...
Page 68
... party took all advan- tages against the court and made a mountain of this mouse ; for it was but a trifle . However it lost him much of his credit and authority in the chair which he was used to have ; and he thought fit to give way and ...
... party took all advan- tages against the court and made a mountain of this mouse ; for it was but a trifle . However it lost him much of his credit and authority in the chair which he was used to have ; and he thought fit to give way and ...
Page 70
... party work ; which he was sensible turned upon him and , staring him in the face , told him he ought to have been wiser . One thing his lordship remarked of him ; which was , that , when any notable party project was in embryo he made ...
... party work ; which he was sensible turned upon him and , staring him in the face , told him he ought to have been wiser . One thing his lordship remarked of him ; which was , that , when any notable party project was in embryo he made ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquaintance affairs afterwards answer appear attended attorney attorney-general better brother brought called cause Chancery circuit clerk Common Pleas concerned council course court courtiers crown death declared discourse divers Dudley North Duke Duke of York Earl England Examen faction father favour fell friends gave gentleman give Hales hath heard honour House of Commons Howell's State Trials humour instance Jeffries judge King's Bench king's counsel knew lady lawyer lived London Lord Chief Justice Lord Keeper Lord North Lord Rochester lordship majesty majesty's married matter means ment never observed opinion papist parliament party person plot practice reason reign Roger North seal serjeant ship side Sir Dudley North Sir William Sir William Jones sort taken thereupon thing thought fit tion told took trial triennial act truth turn writ
Popular passages
Page 294 - Row, called his lodging, and the man's wife was his nurse or worse ; but by virtue of his money, of which he made little account, though he got a great deal, he soon became master of the family ; and, being no changeling, he never removed, but was true to his friends, and they to him, to the last hour of his life.
Page 289 - ... morning, and, after eleven, he hath come out inflamed and staring like one distracted. And that visage he put on when he animadverted on such as he took offence at, which made him a terror to real offenders ; whom also he terrified with his face and voice, as if the thunder of the day of judgment broke over their heads : and nothing ever made men tremble like his vocal inflictions. He loved to insult, and was bold without check , but that only when his place was uppermost.
Page 197 - I have read somewhere of an, eastern king, who put a judge to death for an iniquitous sentence, and ordered his hide to be stuffed into a cushion, and placed upon the tribunal for the son to sit on, who was preferred to his father's office. I fancy, such a memorial might not have been unuseful to a son of sir William Scroggs, and that both he and his successors would often wriggle in their seats, as long as the cushion lasted...
Page 288 - No one that had any expectations from him was safe from his public contempt and derision which some of his minions at the bar bitterly felt. Those above or that could hurt or benefit him, and none else, might depend on fair quarter at his hands. When he was in temper and matters indifferent came before him, he became his seat of justice better than any other I ever saw in his place.
Page 166 - ... but there is, at the heels of her, a popular rage that does little less than demand her to be put to death : and, if a judge is so clear and open as to declare against that impious vulgar opinion, that the devil himself has power to torment and kill innocent children, or that he is pleased to divert himself with the good people's cheese, butter, pigs, and geese, and the like errors of the ignorant and foolish rabble ; the countrymen (the triers) cry this judge hath no religion, for he doth not...
Page 119 - Sir Francis' method of gathering his fees is thus, described: " His business increased, even while he was solicitor, to be so much as to have overwhelmed one less dexterous ; but when he was made attorney-general, though his gains by his office were great, they were much greater by his practice; for that flowed in upon him like an orage, enough to overset one that had not an extraordinary readiness in business.
Page 363 - His lordship received him with much familiarity, and encouraged him to come and see him often, that he might have the pleasure of his conversation. The star-gazer was not wanting to himself in that ; and his lordship was extremely delighted with his accounts and observations about the planets, especially those attendant on Jupiter ; showing how the eclipses of them, being regular and calculable, might rectify the longitude of places upon the globe, and demonstrating that light did not pass instantaneously,...
Page 211 - Gates, and accordingly endeavoured at it ; but it is plain that he had no command of the engine ; and, instead of his sharing the popularity of nursing it, he found himself so intrigued that it was like a wolf by the ears ; he could neither hold it nor let it go ; and, for certain, it bit '-iin at last : just as when a barbarous mastiff attacks a man, he cries poor cur ! and is pulled down at last.
Page 303 - But his silence begot a jealousy, which has hung long upon him. His notions were for the Court. But his incorrupt and sincere way of managing the concerns of the Treasury created in all people a very high esteem of him.
Page 176 - The manner of the carriage is by laying rails of timber from the colliery down to the river, exactly straight and parallel ; and bulky carts are made with four rowlets fitting these rails ; whereby the carriage is so easy that one horse will draw down four or five chaldron of coals, and is an immense benefit to the coal merchants.