The Lives of the Right Hon. Francis North, Baron Guilford, Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, Under King Charles II and King James II: The Hon. Sir Dudley North, Commissioner of the Customs, and Afterwards of the Treasury, to King Charles II : And the Hon. and Rev. Dr. John North, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, and Clerk of the Closet to King Charles II, Volume 1 |
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Page xxii
... him : and it is almost enough to be educated in a family wherein was no instance of irreligion or immorality either practised or allowed : such virtue or efficacy hath an early example to affect the manners of good - natured youth .
... him : and it is almost enough to be educated in a family wherein was no instance of irreligion or immorality either practised or allowed : such virtue or efficacy hath an early example to affect the manners of good - natured youth .
Page 21
... it is called abridgment , of which there are divers large ones of the common law in print , as Fitzherbert , Brook , & c . and are like those the civilians call summists , which , with them , are not allowed as authority .
... it is called abridgment , of which there are divers large ones of the common law in print , as Fitzherbert , Brook , & c . and are like those the civilians call summists , which , with them , are not allowed as authority .
Page 37
When his lordship paid his bill , the virtuous solicitor laid by a sum ( according to an usual rate ) for him , saying that it was their way , and they were allowed at the offices somewhat for encouragement to them that brought business ...
When his lordship paid his bill , the virtuous solicitor laid by a sum ( according to an usual rate ) for him , saying that it was their way , and they were allowed at the offices somewhat for encouragement to them that brought business ...
Page 51
The exhibition allowed his lordship by his fa- Exhibition of sixty ther , was , at first , sixty pounds per annum : * But pounds per ann . redufor seven years ; and after being called , he was not to practise ced to fifty . publicly in ...
The exhibition allowed his lordship by his fa- Exhibition of sixty ther , was , at first , sixty pounds per annum : * But pounds per ann . redufor seven years ; and after being called , he was not to practise ced to fifty . publicly in ...
Page 78
I know no footsteps for many years before , or at any time since , of any such demand made or allowed . But the law was plain , and the forms being out of the common road , not , without great care , foresight and skill , to be pursued ...
I know no footsteps for many years before , or at any time since , of any such demand made or allowed . But the law was plain , and the forms being out of the common road , not , without great care , foresight and skill , to be pursued ...
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afterwards allowed answer appear attended authority better brother brought called cause character charge chief justice common Common Pleas concerned counsel course court crown desired discourse divers Duke Earl evidence Examen faction favour fell friends gave give given Hales hands happened hath heard honour instance interest judge king king's King's Bench knew lady lawyer learned less lived Lord Lord Keeper lordship manner matter means ment never North observed once opinion parliament party pass person plot practice proved reason relation reports respect rest serjeant serve ship side sort taken thing thought tion told took touched town trial true truth turn whole write young
Popular passages
Page 319 - Mr. North, notwithstanding the liberality of some of his opinions, was made a privy counsellor, and some time after Lord Keeper of the Great Seal . He opposed Jeffries, the celebrated Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, with mildness and caution, and secured and used wisely the esteem of his...
Page 182 - His skull-caps, which he wore when he had leisure to observe his constitution, as I touched before, were now destined to lie in a drawer, to receive the money that came in by fees. One had the gold, another the crowns and half-crowns, and another the smaller money. When these vessels were full, they were committed to his friend (the Hon. Roger North), who was constantly near him, to tell out the cash and put it into the bags according to the contents ; and so they went to his treasurers, Blanchard...
Page 317 - There came in my time to the College one Nathaniel Conopios, out of Greece, from Cyrill, the patriarch of Constantinople, who, returning many years after, was made (as I ,understand) Bishop of Smyrna. He was the first I ever saw drink coffee; which custom came not into England till thirty years after.
Page 18 - He, also, diligently common-placed the' substance of his reading, having acquired a very small but legible hand—" for," as his biographer observes, " where contracting is the main business, it is not well to write, as the fashion then was, uncial or semi-uncial letters to look like pigs
Page 132 - Quaker's counsel pretended, that it was no marriage that had passed between them, since it was not solemnized according to the rules of the Church of England ; he declared, that he was not willing on his own opinion to make their children bastards ; and gave directions to the jury to find it special.
Page 286 - And because the hideous road along by the Tyne, for the many and sharp turnings and perpetual precipices, was for a coach, not sustained by main force, impassable, his lordship was forced to take horse, and to ride most part of the way to Hexham.
Page 43 - He is a young man, with a very handsome face, a good head of hair, a pretty big voice, well set, and a good round leg.
Page 279 - 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.
Page 272 - So litde of vain ostentation was to be seen there. At the entrance, where coaches ordinarily came in, the duke built a neat dwelling-house, but pompous stables, which would accommodate forty horses, as well as the best stables he had. This was called the inn, and was contrived for the ease of the suitors, as I may call them ; for instead of...
Page 80 - If he discovered a point which his leader had omitted, he would not excite dislike by moving it himself, but suggest it to his senior, and thus conciliate his regard. He was, also, to use the words of his biographer, " a wonderful artist in nicking a judge's tendency to serve his turn, and yet never failed to pay the greatest regard and deference to his opinion.