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" EXTRACT FROM NORTH'S LIFE OF THE LORD KEEPER GUILFORD.* The Lord Chief Justice Saunders succeeded in the room of Pemberton. His character and his beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling,... "
The Monthly magazine, Volume 5 - Page 364
1708 - 552 pages
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The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: With an ..., Volume 2

Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1854 - 568 pages
...his beginning were equally strange. He was at first nq^better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness in Clement's Inn, as I remember, and courting the attorney's clerks for scraps. The...
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The Friend, Conducted by S.T. Coleridge, No, Volume 2

Derwent Coleridge - 1863 - 372 pages
...his beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness in Clement's Inn, as I remember, and courting the attorney's clerks for scraps. The...
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A Book about Lawyers, Volume 2

John Cordy Jeaffreson - Law - 1867 - 464 pages
...beginning, were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness (in Clement's Inn, as I remember) and courting the attorney's clerks for scraps. The...
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The Book of Modern Anecdotes: Humour, Wit, and Wisdom, American, Legal ...

Howard Paul, John Timbs, Percy Fitzgerald - Anecdotes - 1873 - 456 pages
...and beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar-boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness in Clement's Inn, as I remember, and courting the attorney's clerks for scraps. The...
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The Book of Modern Legal Anecdotes: The Bar, Bench and Woolsack

John Timbs - Law - 1873 - 170 pages
...and beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar-boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness in Clement's Inn, as I remember, and courting the attorney's clerks for scraps. The...
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The Lives of the Right Hon. Francis North, Baron Guilford; the Hon ..., Volume 1

Roger North - Lawyers - 1890 - 456 pages
...his beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness (in Clement's Inn, as I remember) and 1 Burnet has given the following character of...
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The Lives of the Right Hon. Francis North: Baron Guilford; the Hon ..., Volume 1

Roger North - Lawyers - 1890 - 490 pages
...his beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness (in Clement's Inn, as I remember) and 1 Burnet has given the following character of...
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Characters from the Histories & Memoirs of the Seventeenth Century: With an ...

David Nichol Smith - Great Britain - 1918 - 396 pages
...Beginning, were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor Beggar Boy, if not a Parish Foundling, without known Parents, or Relations. He had found a way to live by Obsequiousness (in Clement's-Inn, as I remember) I0 and courting the Attornies Clerks for Scraps. The...
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Philosophical and Theological Opinions

Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2001 - 552 pages
...his beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness in Clement's Inn, as I remember, and courting the attorney's clerks for scraps. The...
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The Pictorial History of England: Being, a History of the People ..., Volume 5

George Lillie Craik - Great Britain - 1841 - 664 pages
...his beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness (in Clement's Inn, as I remember) and courting the attorneys' clerks for scraps. The...
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