The life of sir Edward Coke, with memoirs of his contemporaries, Volume 1 |
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Page xv
Cuthbert William Johnson. maintained to the end ; for at the age of four- score we shall find him still the same ardent lover of his country as in the prime of life ; still exerting his great powers and acquirements , as when he was ...
Cuthbert William Johnson. maintained to the end ; for at the age of four- score we shall find him still the same ardent lover of his country as in the prime of life ; still exerting his great powers and acquirements , as when he was ...
Page 1
... long series of eighty - four years which intervened between the birth and death of Edward Coke , comprehends one of the most eventful periods of English History . Its commencement VOL I. B in the mild reign of Edward VI , was distin-
... long series of eighty - four years which intervened between the birth and death of Edward Coke , comprehends one of the most eventful periods of English History . Its commencement VOL I. B in the mild reign of Edward VI , was distin-
Page 14
... certificate , trans- mitted to me in the obliging communication of Dr. Wordsworth , Master of Trinity . † Dr. Wordsworth's letter to the Author , Nov. 7 1835 . He remained at the University four years . There is 14 THE LIFE OF.
... certificate , trans- mitted to me in the obliging communication of Dr. Wordsworth , Master of Trinity . † Dr. Wordsworth's letter to the Author , Nov. 7 1835 . He remained at the University four years . There is 14 THE LIFE OF.
Page 15
Cuthbert William Johnson. He remained at the University four years . There is no account of his studies to be found at Cambridge ; there exist no traditions con- cerning his sayings and doings . Being intended for the profession of the ...
Cuthbert William Johnson. He remained at the University four years . There is no account of his studies to be found at Cambridge ; there exist no traditions con- cerning his sayings and doings . Being intended for the profession of the ...
Page 54
... Four years afterwards , having lost the favour of the new favourite , Buckingham , he fell under the dis- pleasure of the court , and was prosecuted in the star chamber , for having put into a charter for the city of London , some ...
... Four years afterwards , having lost the favour of the new favourite , Buckingham , he fell under the dis- pleasure of the court , and was prosecuted in the star chamber , for having put into a charter for the city of London , some ...
Other editions - View all
The Life of Sir Edward Coke, with Memoirs of His Contemporaries Cuthbert William Johnson No preview available - 2018 |
The Life of Sir Edward Coke, with Memoirs of His Contemporaries Cuthbert William Johnson No preview available - 2018 |
The Life of Sir Edward Coke, with Memoirs of His Contemporaries Cuthbert William Johnson No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
afterwards answer appears appointed Archbishop Attorney attorney-general Baron Buckingham Burleigh Catesby cause Cecil Chancery Coke's Common Pleas confession counsel Countess Countess of Somerset Court of Chancery Court of Common Court of King's Croke crown death delivered disgrace divers doth Earl Egerton Ellesmere England Essex father favour favourite hath Hatton honour Huntingfield Jesuits judges judgment King James King's Bench Lady lawyer letter Lord Chamberlain Lord Chief Justice Lord Coke lord keeper Lord Treasurer Lordship Majesty Majesty's matter ment murder never Norfolk oath opinion Parl parliament Paston Peacham Percy person pleaded plot prerogative Prince prisoner Privy Council proceedings Queen Elizabeth question Raleigh reign Reports resolved Robert Catesby sergeant shewed Sir Edward Coke Sir Henry Hobart Sir John Sir Thomas Solicitor Somerset speaker speech Star Chamber statute thereof Thomas Percy thought tion told treason trial unto words writ Yelverton
Popular passages
Page 177 - My lord, out of the love I bear to some of your friends, I have a care of your preservation. Therefore I would advise you, as you tender your life, to devise some excuse to shift off your attendance at this parliament. For God and man hath concurred to punish the wickedness of this time.
Page 210 - You are great, and therefore have the more enviers, which would be glad to have you paid at another's cost. Since the time I missed the Solicitor's place, the rather I think by your means, I cannot expect that you and I shall ever serve as Attorney and Solicitor together; but either to serve with another upon your remove, or to step into some other course; so as I am more free than ever I was from any occasion of unworthy conforming myself to you, more than general good manners or your particular...
Page 127 - And that she did acknowledge you had a great wit, and an excellent gift of speech, and much other good learning. But in law she rather thought you could make show to the uttermost of your knowledge, than that you were deep.
Page 171 - You shall swear by the blessed Trinity, and by the sacrament you now propose to receive, never to disclose directly or indirectly, by word or circumstance, the matter that shall be proposed to you to keep secret, nor desist from the execution thereof until the rest shall give you leave.
Page 142 - ... and other such strange light terms he gave me, with that insulting which cannot be expressed. " Herewith stirred, yet I said no more but this : ' Mr Attorney, do not depress me so far ; for I have been your better, and may be again, when it please the Queen.
Page 95 - ... my estate is nothing correspondent for the maintenance of this dignity; for my father, dying, left me a younger brother, and nothing to me but my bare annuity. Then, growing to man's estate, and some small practice of the law, I took a wife, by whom I have had many children, the keeping of us all being a great impoverishment to my estate, and the daily living of us all nothing but my daily industry.
Page 210 - ... stand at a stay. And surely I may not endure in public place to be wronged without repelling the same to my best advantage to right myself. You are great, and therefore have the more enviers, which would be glad to have you paid at another's cost. Since the time I missed the Solicitor's place, the rather I think by your means, I cannot expect that you and I shall ever serve as Attorney and Solicitor together; but...
Page 150 - I do not hear yet, that you have spoken one word against me ; here is no treason of mine done. If my lord Cobham be a traitor, what is that to me ? Attorney.
Page 147 - I shall not need, my lords, to speak any thing concerning the king, nor of the bounty and sweetness of his nature, whose thoughts are innocent, whose words are full of wisdom and learning, and whose works are full of honour ; although it be a true saying, Nunquam nimis, quod nunquam satis.
Page 24 - ... as he was taking the air in a coach with Dr. Witherborne (a Scotchman, physician to the King) towards Highgate, snow lay on the 1 Commented upon. ground, and it came into my Lord's thoughts why flesh might not be preserved in snow, as in salt.