Reflections of a Lawyer |
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Page 31
... Month . Bargain Day in the legal market . Could you imagine a line of lawyers with their degrees in their inside pockets standing out in front of any court building in this country and shouting their wares ? Still , if the fear of being ...
... Month . Bargain Day in the legal market . Could you imagine a line of lawyers with their degrees in their inside pockets standing out in front of any court building in this country and shouting their wares ? Still , if the fear of being ...
Page 33
... months . Statistics are not available or are not clear upon the earnings of those below the $ 2,000 mark , but it is ... month . If these men have nothing to fall back upon in their et days of adversity they are hard put to make both ...
... months . Statistics are not available or are not clear upon the earnings of those below the $ 2,000 mark , but it is ... month . If these men have nothing to fall back upon in their et days of adversity they are hard put to make both ...
Page 35
... months . The number of law students in the United States has increased from fourteen thousand five hundred in 1900 to twenty thousand in 1910. In a correspond- ing time the number of medical students has de- creased from twenty - two ...
... months . The number of law students in the United States has increased from fourteen thousand five hundred in 1900 to twenty thousand in 1910. In a correspond- ing time the number of medical students has de- creased from twenty - two ...
Page 38
... month and no client may come . Then they may come at monthly or weekly intervals just often enough to keep him in his office hoping and pray- Reflections of a lawyer , Stanford Law Library 3 6105. 38 REFLECTIONS OF A LAWYER .
... month and no client may come . Then they may come at monthly or weekly intervals just often enough to keep him in his office hoping and pray- Reflections of a lawyer , Stanford Law Library 3 6105. 38 REFLECTIONS OF A LAWYER .
Page 39
... month , enough to live on if it were not for the office rent , which must be paid , just enough to keep from starving when that has to be considered . He must have clothes , for if he loses his front he is gone and will have to join the ...
... month , enough to live on if it were not for the office rent , which must be paid , just enough to keep from starving when that has to be considered . He must have clothes , for if he loses his front he is gone and will have to join the ...
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Popular passages
Page 50 - There is a time to keep silence,' saith Solomon ; but when I proceeded to the first verse of the fourth chapter of the Ecclesiastes, 'and considered all the oppressions that are done under the sun, and beheld the tears of such as were oppressed, and they had no comforter...
Page 135 - It is no more than justice, quoth the Farmer, to be sure : But, what did I say ? — I mistake. It is your bull that has killed one of my oxen. Indeed ! says the Lawyer ; that alters the case : I must inquire into the affair ; and if — And IF ! said the Farmer — the business, I find, would have been concluded without an IF, had you been as ready to do justice to others as to exact it from them.
Page 143 - Did you ever hear my definition of marriage ? It is, that it resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they cannot be separated ; often moving in opposite directions, yet always punishing any one who comes between them.
Page 134 - One of your oxen, continued he, has been gored by an unlucky bull of mine, and I shall be glad to know how I am to make you a reparation. Thou art a very honest fellow, replied the Lawyer, and wilt not think it unreasonable that I expect one of thy oxen in return. It is no more than justice...
Page 132 - said the two cats, who began to be alarmed for the event, 'give us our respective shares, and we are satisfied.' ' If you are satisfied,' returned the monkey, 'justice is not; a case of this intricate nature is by no means so soon determined.
Page 132 - Upon which he continued to nibble first one piece and then another, till the cats, seeing their cheese gradually diminishing, entreated him to give himself no further trouble, but deliver to them what remained. 'Not so fast, I beseech you, friends,' replied the monkey; 'we owe justice to ourselves as well as to you. What remains is due to me in right of my office.
Page 132 - CATS having stolen some cheese, could not agree about dividing the prize. In order, therefore, to settle the dispute, they consented to refer the matter to a Monkey. The proposed arbitrator very readily accepted the office, and, producing a balance, put a part into each scale.
Page 77 - ... that is made to improve character in this city, every effort to make men respectable, honest, temperate, and sexually clean is a direct blow between the eyes of the Mayor and his whole gang of drunken and lecherous subordinates, in this sense that while we fight iniquity they shield and patronize it ; while we try to convert criminals they manufacture them ; and they have a hundred dollars invested in manufacturing machinery to our one invested in converting machinery.
Page 134 - At last, a poor penitent Ass, with great contrition, acknowledged that once going through the parson's meadow, being very hungry and tempted by the sweetness of the grass, he had cropped a little of it, not more however in quantity than the tip of his tongue ; he was very sorry for the misdemeanour, and hoped . "Hope ! " exclaimed the Fox, with singular zeal; "what canst thou hope for after the commission of so heinous a crime?
Page 134 - Hope!" exclaimed the Fox, with singular zeal ; " what canst thou hope for after the commission of so heinous a crime ? What ! eat the parson's grass ! Oh, sacrilege ! This, this is the flagrant wickedness, my brethren, which has drawn the wrath of Heaven upon our heads, and this the notorious offender whose death must make atonement for all our transgressions.