 | Francis Bacon - English prose literature - 1825 - 524 pages
...and gravity of hearing is an essential part of justice; and an overspeaking judge is no well-tuned cymbal. It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the bar; or to show quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Francis Bacon, Basil Montagu - 1825
...and gravity of hearing is an essential part of justice ; and an overspeaking judge is no well-tuned cymbal. It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the bar; or to show quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Francis Bacon - 1825
...and gravity of hearing is an essential part of justice ; and an overspeaking judge is no weil-tuned cymbal. It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the bar; or to show quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Sir John Fortescue, Andrew Amos - Constitutional law - 1825 - 304 pages
...patience and gravity of hearing is an essential part of Justice, and an overspeaking Judge is no welltuned cymbal : it is no grace to a Judge first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the bar; or to shew quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Francis Bacon - 1834 - 784 pages
...Life of Fitzjames. The errors of patience are on the one side slowness, on the other dispatch. (rf) It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the bar; or to shew quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Charles Edward Dodd - Law reform - 1828 - 126 pages
...and gravity of bearing is an essential part of justice, and an over-speaking judge is no well-tuned cymbal. It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have learned in due time from the bar, or to show quickness" of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Joseph Hopkinson - Judges - 1830 - 40 pages
...worse torture than the torture of the laws." The same great man well described our Judge when he said, "It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have heard, in due time, from the bar; or to shew his quickness of conceit in cutting off... | |
 | Francis Bacon - English essays - 1833 - 216 pages
...and gravity of hearing is an essential part of justice ; and an overspeaking judge is no well-tuned cymbal. It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the ba.- ; or to show quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Francis Bacon - Philosophy - 1838 - 894 pages
...and gravity of hearing is an essential part of justice ; and an over-speaking judge is no well-tuned cymbal. It is no grace to a judge, first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the bar ; or to show quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
 | Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) - 1840 - 246 pages
...and gravity of hearing is an essential part of justice ; and an overspeaking judge is no well-tuned cymbal. It is no grace to a judge first to find that which he might have heard in due time from the bar; or to show quickness of conceit in cutting off evidence... | |
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