| Sherwin Cody - 1904 - 566 pages
...STOCKDALE (WHEN TRIED FOR A LIBEL ON THE HOUSE OF COMMONS; COURT OF THE KING'S BENCH, DECEMBER 9, 1789) GENTLEMEN of the Jury, — Mr. Stockdale, who is brought...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence ; since, although he well knows... | |
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1905 - 458 pages
...LIBEL ON THE HOUSE OF COMMONS, IN THE COURT OF KING'S BENCH, DECEMBER g, 1789 GENTLEMEN OF THE JUKY,— Mr. Stockdale, who is brought as a criminal before...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence; since, although he well knows... | |
| William Trufant Foster - 1908 - 516 pages
...opened his plea with an attempt to show that if he had any prejudice, it was against the client : — GENTLEMEN OF THE JURY, — Mr. Stockdale, who is brought...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence, since, although he well knows... | |
| William Trufant Foster - 1908 - 512 pages
...attempt to show that if he had any prejudice, it was against the client : — GENTLEMEN OF THE JUKY, — Mr. Stockdale, who is brought as a criminal before...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence, since, although he well knows... | |
| Carroll Lewis Maxcy - 1916 - 348 pages
...constitutes, if we may so speak, the poetry of eloquence" (Edinburgh Review, vol. xvr, p. 109). — Goodrich. GENTLEMEN OF THE JURY: Mr. Stockdale, who is brought...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence; since, although he well knows... | |
| Carroll Lewis Maxcy - 1916 - 346 pages
...poetry of eloquence" (Edinburgh Review, vol. xvi, p. 109). — • Goodrich. GENTLEMEN OF THE JUBY: Mr. Stockdale, who is brought as a criminal before...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence; since, although he well knows... | |
| William Trufant Foster - 1917 - 496 pages
...with an attempt to show that if he had any prejudice, it was against his client : — GENTLEMEN or THE JURY, — Mr. Stockdale, who is brought as a criminal...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence, since, although he well knows... | |
| Grenville Kleiser - 1920 - 192 pages
...upon Washington. (Farewell Words in Springfield: Abraham Lincoln.) Example of Forensic Introduction 2. Gentlemen of the Jury, — Mr. Stockdale, who is brought...of this book, has, by employing me as his advocate, reposed what must appear to many an extraordinary degree of confidence; since, altho he well knows... | |
| |