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Updated: June 17, 2025
Protocol, can inform us if there is a later deed? 'Please to favour me, Mr. Pleydell'; and so saying, he took the deed out of the learned counsel's hand, and glanced his eye over the contents. 'Too cool, said Pleydell, 'too cool by half; he has another deed in his pocket still.
He may properly rely on the counsel's not asserting a fact that has not been proven. Yet he knows that lawyers owe entire devotion to the interest of the client, and warm zeal in the maintenance of his rights and that they will exert their utmost ability lest anything be taken or be withheld from him, save by the rules of law, legally applied.
The change in him was so marked that I was conscious of it before I really saw him. Every eye had reflected it, and it was no surprise to me when I noted the relieved, almost cheerful aspect of his countenance as he took his place and met his counsel's greeting with a smile the first, I believe, which had been seen on his face since his sister's death. That counsel I had already noted.
The anteroom next door, where the clerks sat, was also a waiting-room for various individuals from the different parts of the State who continually sought the counsel's presence. "Haven't seen much of you since you've be'n home, Austen," his father remarked as an opening. "Your legal business compels you to travel a great deal," answered Austen, turning from the window and smiling.
Brown which was the counsel's name was a little startled at this unexpected remonstrance, and paused, looking up at the Judge. "Go on," said my lord "go on, pray," pretending not to know the cause of the interruption. He went on accordingly for a considerable time, with a very noisy speech so noisy that one could not hear one's self bark, which I did two or three times without any effect.
P leads; and you bring me this for the plaintiff, and at the last moment too! You must be crazed." "I told the plaintiff and her grandfather," rejoined Mr. Barnes, "that it was too late to bespeak counsel's attention to the case; and that the fee, all they have, with much difficulty, been able to raise, was ridiculously small; but they insisted on my applying to you Oh, here they are!"
It is of the utmost importance that we should take counsel's opinion about our lives, and that we should pray, "Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?" that we should, if need be, weep much, until the Lamb shall take off the seals from that book of life, which, in the archives of the celestial city, is entitled "The Life of taken from the Pattern in the Mount"; that we should learn to conform ourselves to the Divine original, just as a manuscript, however deformed by glosses and traditions, is accurately and certainly emended by the discovery of the original text; that we should know, in some sense, as Christ did, whence we come and whither we go; that, as He said, we also might feel that for this end we were born and for this purpose we came into the world, that we might bear witness to the truth; that, with Him, too, we might in some measure be able to say, "The son can do nothing but what he seeth the Father do"; and that at our ending it might be said, "He lived out the secret thought and counsel of the Almighty."
And if it chanced to be a criminal trial, his eyes, in nine cases out of ten, would wander to the dock in search of the prisoner, in vain; for that gentleman would most likely be lounging among the most distinguished ornaments of the legal profession, whispering suggestions in his counsel's ear, or making a toothpick out of an old quill with his penknife.
Put these considerations before her from me, then. Poly. No, not that way, please. Make your speech, just as though she were listening, and I will reproduce you to her. Ly. Very well, then. She is here; she has just delivered the oration which you have described to me; it is now counsel's turn.
The attorneys' clerks don't carry flowers in their bags, or posies under their arms, as they run to the counsel's chambers; the few lawyers who take constitutional walks think very little about York and Lancaster, especially since the railroad business is over. Only antiquarians and literary amateurs care to look at the gardens with much interest, and fancy good Sir Roger de Coverley and Mr.
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