The Leaders of the Old Bar of Philadelphia ....C. Sherman & son, 1859 - 120 頁 |
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第 29 頁
... election of Albert Gallatin to the Senate of the United States , by the Legislature of Pennsylvania , and was heard before the Senate : the first occasion on which the Senate opened its doors to professional counsel , or to the public ...
... election of Albert Gallatin to the Senate of the United States , by the Legislature of Pennsylvania , and was heard before the Senate : the first occasion on which the Senate opened its doors to professional counsel , or to the public ...
第 87 頁
... election in 1799 , when he retired for , or was super- seded by , the son of Governor McKean : and he held the same office by appointment of Governor Snyder , after his election in 1808 ; and this professional office , and the ...
... election in 1799 , when he retired for , or was super- seded by , the son of Governor McKean : and he held the same office by appointment of Governor Snyder , after his election in 1808 ; and this professional office , and the ...
第 114 頁
... election for their offices , and for a term of years so short , as to keep the source of their elevation to the Bench continually before their eyes . At least once again in the life of every Judge , we may suppose he will be compelled ...
... election for their offices , and for a term of years so short , as to keep the source of their elevation to the Bench continually before their eyes . At least once again in the life of every Judge , we may suppose he will be compelled ...
第 115 頁
... election , that puts a cord around the neck of every one of them , during the whole term of his office . It is transcendently worse than the principle of original election at the polls . Doubtless there is more than one of the Judges ...
... election , that puts a cord around the neck of every one of them , during the whole term of his office . It is transcendently worse than the principle of original election at the polls . Doubtless there is more than one of the Judges ...
第 116 頁
... elections by the people — and the true liberty and responsibility of the press . It takes strength from the only arm that can do no mischief by its strength , and gives it to those who have no general intelligence to this end , in the ...
... elections by the people — and the true liberty and responsibility of the press . It takes strength from the only arm that can do no mischief by its strength , and gives it to those who have no general intelligence to this end , in the ...
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常見字詞
able ad idem afterwards Andrew Hamilton argued argument Attorney-General Bar of Philadelphia Bench better body cause Chief Justice Tilghman City Claflin Colonies common Constitution of 1776 cotemporaries counsel countenance court-room death dignity doctrine doubt Edward Tilghman election eminent eyes fact faculties give Government Hamilton heard honor Indt Inger Ingersoll's JARED INGERSOLL Judge Chase judicial jury knew law of treason lawyer learning Legislature less Lewis's Lord Mansfield Maryland McKean ment Middle Temple mind never Newlin note-books occasion Old Bar opinion party Pennsylvania perhaps Philadelphia Bar popular interest powers practice prejudice President Reed principles probably profession professional Quaker question quick Rawle reason recollect regard remarkable reputation respect side sion smoked sometimes Stamp Act Supreme Court sylvania temper tenure Theophilus Parsons thing thought Tilgh tion took trial virtue Westminster Hall Whig Wigfall WILLIAM LEWIS words
熱門章節
第 110 頁 - Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back, Wherein he puts alms for oblivion, A great-sized monster of ingratitudes : Those scraps are good deeds past ; which are devoured As fast as they are made, forgot as soon As done.
第 50 頁 - England," says Horace Binney, (art. Edward Tilghman, Encyclopedia Amerkana, vol. xiv.,) ''and by each of them men have succeeded in public estimation to an almost equal extent. One of them, which may be called the old way, is a methodical study of the general system of law, and of its grounds and reasons, beginning with the fundamental law of estates and tenures, and pursuing the derivative branches in logical...
第 51 頁 - ... of its grounds and reasons, beginning with the fundamental law of estates and tenures, and pursuing the derivative branches in logical succession, and the collateral subjects in due order, by which the student acquires a knowledge of principles that rule in all departments of the science, and learns to feel, as much as to know, what is in harmony with the system, and what is not.
第 83 頁 - After doing my best, one morning, to overtake Chief Justice Marshall in his quick march to the Capitol, when he was nearer to eighty than to seventy, I asked him to what cause in particular he attributed that strong and quick step ; and he replied that he thought it was most due to his commission in the army of the Revolution, in which he had been a regular foot practitioner for nearly six years.
第 51 頁 - ... in due order ; by which the student acquires a knowledge of principles that rule in all departments of the science, and learns to feel as much as to 'know what is in harmony with the system and what not. The other is, to get an outline of the system, by the aid of commentaries, and to fill it up by...
第 66 頁 - ... my Father Walton will be seen twice in no man's company he does not like: and likes none but such as he believes to be very honest men; which is one of the best arguments, or at least of the best testimonies I have, that I either am, or that he thinks me, one of those, seeing I have not yet found him weary of me.
第 113 頁 - This is human nature, and shows that even first-rate talents require the occasional dew of public sympathy and praise. Full public justice was not done to Tilghman, Lewis, Ingersoll, Rawle, and Dallas, who occupied the front seats at the Bar of Philadelphia at the close of the last and the beginning of the present century. It was done at the Bar, and it was done in other States, but it was not done generally in the City. The night is now settling fast upon those memories which go back to their meridian,...
第 111 頁 - ... gained their first public consideration elsewhere. She is wanting in civic personality, or what is perhaps a better phrase for the thought, a family unity or identity. She does not take, and she never has taken, satisfaction in habitually honoring her distinguished men as her men, as men of her own family. It is the city that is referred to, as distinguished, perhaps, from the rest of the State. She has never done it in the face of the world, as Charleston has done it, as Richmond has done it,...
第 51 頁 - No one of his contemporaries would have felt injured by his receiving this praise. Upon questions which to most men are perplexing at first, and continue to be so until they have worked their way to a conclusion by elaborate reasoning, he seemed to possess an instinct, which seized the true result before he had taken time to prove it. This was no doubt the fruit of severe and regular training, by which his mind became so imbued with legal principles, that they unconsciously governed his first impressions.