The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen12F. Frommann, 1962 |
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Página 116
... conclusion that the Judge ought to see that the prisoner has fair play as far as the law is concerned ( which was a great step in advance ) , it further occurred to him as a corollary that the Judge ought to be in an impartial frame of ...
... conclusion that the Judge ought to see that the prisoner has fair play as far as the law is concerned ( which was a great step in advance ) , it further occurred to him as a corollary that the Judge ought to be in an impartial frame of ...
Página 167
... conclusion , we could have judged better what the intention of the proceeding was . But I fancy that in this case also , as in those of Talbot and Peacham and St. John , the object of the Government was to establish and make known the ...
... conclusion , we could have judged better what the intention of the proceeding was . But I fancy that in this case also , as in those of Talbot and Peacham and St. John , the object of the Government was to establish and make known the ...
Página 343
... conclusions which na- turally follow from the premises ; a blind partiality , disguised under an air of judicial gravity ; and ... conclusion it leads to is what Euclid would have called absurd . These defects will help to main- tain the ...
... conclusions which na- turally follow from the premises ; a blind partiality , disguised under an air of judicial gravity ; and ... conclusion it leads to is what Euclid would have called absurd . These defects will help to main- tain the ...
Contenido
BOOK V | 1 |
The Kings second speech announcing the Bills of Grace | 2 |
CHAPTER II | 31 |
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Términos y frases comunes
answer Attorney Bacon XII Bills Bishop called cause Chamberlain Chancery charge Commendams Committee Commons concerning confessed copy Council Countess of Somerset course Court Crown deliver divers doth doubt Earl evidence examination excellent Majesty favour further Gibson Papers give guilty hand hath hear honour House impoisonment Impositions James Judges judgment King King's Bench last Parliament Learned Counsel letter Lord Chancellor Lord Chief Justice Lord Coke Lord of Somerset Lord Steward Lord Treasurer Lordships Majesty Majesty's most humble matter means ment mought never occasion offence opinion Overbury particular party Peacham persons poison prerogative princes Privy proceeding question reason rest saith sent servant shew Sir John Sir John Wentworth Sir Robert Cotton Sir Thomas Sir Thomas Overbury speak speech Star Chamber statute taken thereof things thought tion touching trial true unto Weston wherein wished words