First therefore behold your errors. In discourse you delight to speak too much, not to hear other men; this, some say, becomes a pleader not a judge ; for by this sometimes your affections are entangled with a love of your own arguments, though they be... Sir Edward Coke and the Elizabethan Age - Seite 189von Allen D. Boyer - 2003 - 325 SeitenEingeschränkte Leseprobe - Über dieses Buch
| 1838 - 596 Seiten
...worse description. This was one of the errors of which Bacon warned him in his extraordinary reproof: ' In discourse you delight to speak too much, not to hear ' other men. This some say becomes a pleader, not a judge ; for ' by this sometimes your affections are entangled... | |
| 1886 - 332 Seiten
...Coke on his removal from the chief-justiceship, in 1616: — "First, therefore, behold your errors. In discourse you delight to speak too much, not to hear other men. . . . Secondly, you cloy your auditory when you should be observed ; speech should be either sweet... | |
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