Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 16 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 112551 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 Mr. 8 Justice 8 John 6 Lord 6 James 6 Henry 6 Court 5 United 5 States 5 Judge 5 Government 5 God 5 Congress 5 Chief 4 William 4 Washington 4 Virginia 4 Sir 4 President 4 New 4 National 4 Mrs. 4 Marshall 4 Madison 4 Jefferson 4 January 4 House 4 General 4 Constitution 3 british 3 York 3 Supreme 3 Richmond 3 October 3 March 3 London 3 King 3 George 3 February 3 England 3 Adams 2 man 2 look 2 great 2 good 2 french 2 american 2 Writings 2 Thomas 2 St. Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 4001 man 2713 law 2709 time 2507 case 2249 court 1974 year 1952 day 1614 power 1577 opinion 1469 people 1346 life 1292 state 1278 judge 1249 letter 1173 part 1170 thing 1133 government 1131 country 1088 place 1080 way 1052 hand 1021 house 1006 act 987 n. 958 friend 929 question 916 trial 905 right 884 fact 879 work 875 word 838 land 832 nothing 830 wife 825 party 807 war 807 justice 804 order 801 father 798 mind 792 member 701 office 698 argument 691 name 691 course 680 person 679 king 676 subject 676 duty 657 principle Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 25338 _ 5377 Marshall 2193 Mr. 1872 Jefferson 1854 States 1633 Court 1603 Washington 1583 Burr 1582 Virginia 1567 John 1514 State 1461 United 1269 Justice 1208 Judge 1192 New 1131 Constitution 1081 Congress 1050 Ib 979 M. 952 Supreme 939 Sir 930 Lord 916 Adams 892 Henry 872 James 854 President 816 Government 754 France 735 Chief 731 William 714 York 689 See 685 House 680 National 678 King 647 England 641 Madison 635 Thomas 588 . 579 Fitzjames 540 America 533 Legislature 531 J. 526 Richmond 508 Mrs. 504 Federalist 499 Judiciary 493 Hamilton 491 General 490 Cong Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 19590 he 15247 it 14465 i 6139 him 5526 they 5039 you 3460 we 3394 them 3016 me 2319 she 1465 himself 1049 us 915 her 451 itself 448 themselves 404 myself 173 one 160 herself 153 yourself 98 ourselves 57 theirs 47 mine 33 yours 28 ye 24 ''s 22 ours 22 ''em 21 his 18 thee 5 whey 5 hay 5 em 4 hers 4 genl 4 ay 3 oneself 2 yourselves 2 wil 2 wi 2 thyself 2 thumbscrews 2 their 2 pelf 2 its 2 inn 2 aw''y 1 you''ll 1 wy 1 wtin 1 writing,"--such Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 59669 be 20993 have 5923 do 5512 say 3994 make 3470 see 2862 take 2838 give 2516 go 2416 come 1977 know 1953 think 1598 write 1371 find 1284 get 1228 call 1174 tell 1170 become 1078 look 1046 seem 982 hold 937 pass 927 bring 880 appear 866 leave 866 hear 856 ask 840 put 837 show 835 follow 801 declare 781 stand 780 speak 717 begin 699 pay 695 believe 643 receive 640 feel 636 consider 608 keep 607 send 593 carry 587 try 567 turn 560 meet 553 use 548 continue 543 let 531 sit 518 read Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 10922 not 3796 so 2767 more 2544 then 2484 great 2452 only 2373 other 2128 very 2071 now 1932 most 1889 up 1855 first 1716 good 1712 as 1614 well 1595 such 1581 also 1533 much 1414 never 1407 out 1389 even 1366 same 1216 many 1203 long 1202 old 1198 little 1117 own 1016 again 970 last 923 too 918 still 917 however 914 here 904 ever 873 thus 852 public 784 down 780 there 773 new 745 far 730 just 727 american 712 high 682 young 676 on 658 once 649 few 637 soon 628 almost 620 whole Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 437 most 435 good 361 least 234 great 151 high 66 bad 65 able 60 strong 52 eld 44 Most 41 early 38 small 38 slight 28 large 24 near 23 deep 20 full 20 fine 19 young 18 old 18 manif 18 low 18 happy 17 close 16 warm 15 late 14 wise 14 rich 14 long 13 dear 11 simple 11 bold 10 poor 10 noble 10 fit 10 faint 9 pleasant 9 heavy 8 pure 8 keen 8 bright 8 bitter 7 vile 7 prov 7 dark 7 brave 6 wild 6 weak 6 strange 6 statesmanlike Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1495 most 56 well 52 least 3 hard 1 writ 1 worst 1 queerest 1 like,--i''m 1 lest 1 highest 1 formost 1 fittest 1 fairest 1 demo^s 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.archive.org 2 kdl.kyvl.org 2 books.google.com 2 archive.org 1 gallica.bnf.fr Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42961/42961-h/42961-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42961/42961-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31037/31037-h/31037-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31037/31037-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/lifeofsirjamesfi00stepuoft 1 http://www.archive.org/details/chiefjusticenove00franiala 1 http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=kyetexts;cc= 1 http://kdl.kyvl.org/ 1 http://gallica.bnf.fr 1 http://books.google.com/books?vid=36y7s22Gn18C&id 1 http://books.google.com 1 http://archive.org/details/housewithsixtycl00chil 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 25 marshall did not 9 _ is _ 8 _ was _ 8 case came on 8 marshall was as 8 marshall was now 7 marshall was not 6 _ did _ 6 _ see _ 6 marshall does not 6 marshall had not 6 marshall writes story 5 case was not 5 man was not 5 marshall took part 5 power does not 5 virginia was not 4 case was again 4 court had jurisdiction 4 jefferson became president 4 jefferson did not 4 law is not 4 law was not 4 law were not 4 letter was not 4 marshall was then 4 people did not 4 people were not 4 states did not 4 time went on 3 _ is not 3 _ make _ 3 burr did not 3 burr had just 3 burr had not 3 burr was now 3 case did not 3 case was first 3 cases are not 3 court is now 3 court was again 3 court was not 3 days was not 3 jefferson was not 3 justice was not 3 law does not 3 laws are not 3 man is incapable 3 marshall had carefully 3 marshall is here Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 court had no jurisdiction 3 court having no jurisdiction 3 states have no power 2 court has no jurisdiction 2 marshall did not even 2 time is not far 1 _ had no motive 1 _ had no thought 1 _ is no _ 1 _ is no part 1 _ is not extended 1 _ were not _ 1 burr had not even 1 burr made no proposition 1 burr was not actually 1 case has no moral 1 case is not yet 1 case was not authority 1 case was not just 1 case was not less 1 cases are not indeed 1 cases are not parallel 1 cases were no longer 1 court had no authority 1 court had no discretion 1 court had no physical 1 court had no power 1 court had no practical 1 court has no authority 1 court has no right 1 court have no jurisdiction 1 court was not competent 1 courts had no authority 1 courts had no common 1 courts had no jurisdiction 1 courts had no right 1 courts have no jurisdiction 1 day is not quite 1 days was not exactly 1 days was not much 1 jefferson did not even 1 jefferson had no words 1 jefferson made no headway 1 jefferson was not fully 1 jefferson was not willing 1 judge had no power 1 judge has no alternative 1 judge has no more 1 judge made no concealment 1 judges are not independent A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15894 author = Andrews, Mary Raymond Shipman title = The Lifted Bandage date = keywords = Ben; Dick; Jack summary = You''ll want to know," he said in a tone which went to The man sat on the edge of the divan staring out of the window, minute The man''s head turned slowly and his look rested inquiringly on his young man, watching the face, bent forward and gripped his other hand on The judge turned a ghastly look upon the impetuous, bright face. honor of Jack''s life left, I think I could finish the years with The steady voice stopped a moment and the young man shivered slightly; Miller was gone; Dick''s father waited, his gaze fixed on the judge''s The judge turned his dreamy, bright look toward the frightened man. Dick was here a while ago and said things--you know what "I know your thought," the judge answered the sound, and his eyes were of it all." As the man waited, watching his son''s face, he groaned id = 40388 author = Beveridge, Albert J. (Albert Jeremiah) title = The Life of John Marshall, Volume 1: Frontiersman, soldier, lawmaker, 1755-1788 date = keywords = Ambler; Congress; Constitution; Convention; County; December; Elliott; Fairfax; February; Federal; General; George; Government; Henry; House; January; Jefferson; John; June; Lee; Legislature; Madison; Marshall; Mary; Mason; Mr.; National; New; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia; President; Randolph; Revolution; Richmond; State; Thomas; Virginia; Washington; William; Writings; York; american; british; constitutionalist summary = The "Minute Men" of Virginia--Lieutenant John Marshall young Virginia soldier, George Washington (then only twenty-three years Thus, Thomas Jefferson was the great-grandson and John Marshall the miles,--George Mason, James Madison, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, officer in Washington''s army, there were four other Thomas Marshalls, "My father," often said John Marshall, "was a far abler man than any of Marshall a member of the Virginia Convention,[210] when once more the Jefferson which Marshall and nearly all the Virginia officers and To help to put Virginia in line for the Constitution, John Marshall, for Marshall also pointed out that the people of Virginia ought not to be was, with Thomas Marshall, then a member of the Virginia Legislature government." Thus Marshall stated that principle which he was to Constitutional Convention of 1788 Marshall stated in debate the elements civil cases, neither did Virginia''s Constitution, said Marshall, "direct id = 40389 author = Beveridge, Albert J. (Albert Jeremiah) title = The Life of John Marshall, Volume 2: Politician, diplomatist, statesman, 1789-1801 date = keywords = Adams; America; August; Britain; Congress; Constitution; December; Federalist; France; General; Gerry; Government; Hamilton; Henry; House; Jefferson; John; Journal; July; King; Madison; March; Marshall; Morris; Mr.; National; October; Pickering; Pinckney; President; Republicans; Richmond; Secretary; States; Talleyrand; United; Virginia; Washington; Works; Writings; british; french summary = opposition--Washington appoints Marshall to be United States writes "Camillus"--Marshall stands by Washington--Jefferson Supreme Court of the United States--Marshall makes a tremendous arose from the time Washington became President until Marshall took his Britain] and republican France," declares Marshall. neutrality of the United States," writes Marshall, "that great party As soon as Jefferson got word of Marshall''s support of Washington''s Washington, Marshall, and other Virginia Federalists had grown; while American Government, which Marshall now is to write, were transmitted to Marshall now insists that the American case be formally stated to the French Government objected, says Marshall, were contraband by the laws Having made his report to the President and Secretary of State, Marshall General Washington, I believe the President, Pinckney, and Marshall are John Marshall, of Virginia, to be Chief Justice of the United States, John Marshall, who, as Chief Justice of the United States, presided at id = 40445 author = Beveridge, Albert J. (Albert Jeremiah) title = The Life of John Marshall, Volume 3: Conflict and construction, 1800-1815 date = keywords = Aaron; Adams; American; Annals; Blennerhassett; Burr; Chase; Chief; Congress; Constitution; Court; February; Federalist; General; Georgia; Government; House; January; Jefferson; John; Judiciary; Justice; MSS; Madison; March; Marshall; Mr.; National; New; Plumer; President; Randolph; Senate; Senator; Sess; States; Supreme; Trials; United; Virginia; Washington; Wilkinson; York; republican summary = Burr for treason--Marshall indirectly criticizes Jefferson-Hay writes Jefferson that Marshall favors Burr--At last Jefferson became President and John Marshall Chief Justice of the United Chief Justice of the United States, John Marshall, at first, found question: Can the Supreme Court of the United States invalidate an act The trial of John Pickering, Judge of the United States Court for the Again, during the trial of Aaron Burr,[398] Jefferson denounced Marshall Act which Marshall and the entire court had, five years before, declared Pickering, Judge of the United States Court for the District of New trial, John Marshall, the Supreme Court, and the whole National Marshall''s "party diatribe" clung like a burr in Jefferson''s mind and In substance Jefferson said that if Marshall should suffer Burr _Where Marshall presided at the Burr trial._] [1266] This part of Marshall''s opinion (_Burr Trials_, II, 425-34; 4 [1337] "Letters to John Marshall, Chief Justice of the United States," id = 40533 author = Beveridge, Albert J. (Albert Jeremiah) title = The Life of John Marshall, Volume 4: The building of the nation, 1815-1835 date = keywords = Act; Adams; Bank; Burr; Carolina; Chief; College; Congress; Constitution; Convention; Court; Dartmouth; Fairfax; February; Georgia; Government; Jackson; James; Jefferson; John; Judiciary; Justice; Kentucky; Legislature; Livingston; Madison; Marshall; Maryland; National; New; President; Ratification; Richmond; South; States; Story; Supreme; Union; United; Virginia; Washington; Webster; Wheaton; William; York; american; british summary = resists order of the United States Court--Marshall''s opinion Georgia--The State again ignores the Supreme Court--Marshall State defies the Supreme Court--Marshall''s opinion--Georgia National court was promptly met by an act of the State Legislature which the Chief Justice delivered his opinion in the case of the United States Supreme Court, directed the United States Marshal to enforce the decree the Supreme Court of the United States, a power to _re-examine, by way highest court of any State in all cases where the National Constitution, repealing act, took the case to the Supreme Court of the United States. of the Supreme Court of the United States," Marshall, at the head of his court, because neither the constitution nor any law of the United States Virginia''s defiance of National authority.[967] Marshall thus states the Marshall had been Chief Justice of the United States for twenty years, Act of 1801; Marshall, John (_Chief Justice_); Supreme Court. id = 10392 author = Brampton, Henry Hawkins, Baron title = The Reminiscences of Sir Henry Hawkins (Baron Brampton) date = keywords = Assizes; Bar; Baron; Bench; CHAPTER; Chief; Claimant; Court; Hawkins; Henry; Jack; James; John; Judge; Justice; Lord; Majesty; Mr.; Orkins; Queen; Roger; Sam; Sheriff; Sir; St.; case; good; great; old; time summary = offence, smiled in a good-natured manner, and said it was no doubt a in that way so many good things have come down to the present day. "Take time, my boy," said Maule; "don''t answer hurriedly; think it "O yes, sir," said the witness, "he knowed what he was about, right "My lord," answered the witness, "his lordship said as how he looked One morning my groom came to me and said, "I think, sir, I can find a There was a man at the time referred to known as old Sam Linton, the So I said there was little doubt, as the man was dead, "Look after this man," said the farmer; "he has committed murder. "Yes," said I, thinking a little, "I recollect one very good thing the prisoner said he would like the men to be called. I believed every word the man said, and so did the jury. id = 40076 author = Campbell, John Campbell, Baron title = Atrocious Judges : Lives of Judges Infamous as Tools of Tyrants and Instruments of Oppression date = keywords = Bench; Charles; Chief; Commons; Court; Duke; Earl; Edward; England; God; Hall; Henry; House; Hyde; James; Jeffreys; John; Justice; King; London; Lord; Mr.; North; Parliament; Pleas; Scroggs; Sir; States; United; Westminster; Williamson summary = King''s Bench, went with another judge to the House of Lords, to inquire justice of the common bench of our said lord the king, John Holt, Roger "Lord Chief Justice Billing left it to the jury to consider what the words Court of King''s Bench, with a promise of being raised to be chief justice the advice of Sir John Fitzjames, the lord chief justice of England, Lord Chief Justice Fleming remained at the head of the common law rather Lord Chief Justice Hyde proceeded with great temper and seeming respect should be reappointed lord chief justice of the Court of King''s Bench. were brought by _habeas corpus_ before the Court of King''s Bench, having When he was installed chief justice of the King''s Bench, Lord Chancellor Sir John Raynsford, the chief justice of the King''s Bench, whose place he to be chief justice of the Court of King''s Bench, ought, by a sober, id = 42961 author = Child, Frank Samuel title = The House With Sixty Closets: A Christmas Story for Young Folks and Old Children date = keywords = Christmas; Judge; Mrs.; Ruth; Samuel; child; closet; house; illustration; little summary = CLOSETS, RUTH, AND THE "LITTLE JUDGE" 113 ONCE upon a time there lived a good Judge in an old New England town. Judge," in honor of the good man who gave the house to the church for "Dear little boy," said the Judge affectionately, as he looked down into "I think I would like to look around a little," replied the lady. "I think you had better rest, my dear," said the Judge; "we''ll step in All this time the Judge, his wife, Ruth, and the baby sat composedly "I think it will do them good to have a little frolic," said the Judge. "But you wouldn''t let your children play like that," said Ruth. "I think we had better put the baby in the first closet," said Ruth. "Don''t you think it''s time to call the children?" said Ruth. Ruth didn''t like to go into the Judge''s old study, but that was where id = 15752 author = Field, Stephen J. (Stephen Johnson) title = Personal Reminiscences of Early Days in California with Other Sketches; To Which Is Added the Story of His Attempted Assassination by a Former Associate on the Supreme Bench of the State date = keywords = Althea; Barbour; California; Circuit; Congress; County; Court; District; Field; Francisco; General; Judge; Justice; Marysville; Mr.; Mrs.; Neagle; New; San; Sarah; Sharon; States; Supreme; Terry; Turner; United summary = Circuit Court of the United States for the District of California, Court of the United States, Justice Field, of California, United States Supreme Court, whose judge the Senator-attorney of the practice of said Supreme Court of the United States, above referred States District Court of Oregon, who sat in the case with Judge the suit in the state court had been brought, the Judge said: Although Judge Terry had been Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Judge Terry next applied to the Supreme Court of the United States for Court of the United States, Judge Terry''s friends made a strenuous case of Mr. and Mrs. Terry in your United States Circuit Court of placing a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States in a Justice Field commenced in the United States Circuit Court, under the judges of the Supreme Court of the State, would they have been id = 12930 author = Fountainhall, John Lauder, Lord title = Publications of the Scottish History Society, Volume 36 Journals of Sir John Lauder Lord Fountainhall with His Observations on Public Affairs and Other Memoranda 1665-1676 date = keywords = Abbotshall; Advocat; Alexander; Andrew; August; Broun; Charles; Christ; Church; Colledge; Council; Daillé; David; Dick; Earle; Edinburgh; England; English; Fountainhall; France; George; God; Hamilton; Henry; Interlined; James; January; John; July; June; Justice; King; Laird; Lauder; Lauderdale; Law; London; Lord; MSS; March; Mr.; November; October; Orleans; Oxford; Paris; Parliament; Poictiers; Ramsay; Robert; Rome; Rot; Scotland; Scots; September; Session; Sir; Society; St.; Thomas; Walter; William; dollar; french; great; item; man; penny summary = SIR JOHN LAUDER, first Baronet, Lord Fountainhall''s father house being one of the Kings Counsellers; yet these we saw ware wery rich; Lord; he finding the answer wery good, he immediatly went and told the King the toune we saw on each hand a brave stately house belonging to my Lord of Item given to my wife for the house, a dollar. Given to my wife for the use of the house and other things, 4 dollars. Item, given hir for the use of the house on the 1 of August 21 dollars. Item, given to my wife for the use of the house, 8 dollars. Item, given to my wife for the use of the house, 8 dollars. Item, given to my wife for the use of the house, 8 dollars. Item, given to my wife on the 9 day of June 1673, 6 dollars. id = 36854 author = Franzos, Karl Emil title = The Chief Justice: A Novel date = keywords = Berger; Bolosch; Chief; Court; Dernegg; Dr.; Franz; George; God; Herr; Judge; Justice; Lord; Minister; Sendlingen; Victorine; Vienna; Werner summary = friend Berger took a more hopeful view; rudeness, he said, had become "Back the same way," said Berger slowly, "and again stood for a long It seemed to Berger as if this were Sendlingen, but he did not know for Berger was with Sendlingen daily, and daily his questioning look Berger looked at the childish old man. "My poor friend," said Berger, "in your heart, too, it has surely "In the prison?" The old man''s face twitched, he seized Berger''s arm Dr. Berger," said the old man imploringly. Sendlingen went to Berger who had now been waiting for him several "Yes," said Berger, "but I doubt whether it is by Sendlingen." This was man-servant," he said, handing Berger the telescope. Good day!" she cried to the old man as he went by. "I know the work," said Berger. Two days later Dr. George Berger received a letter of Sendlingen''s, id = 31037 author = Osbourne, Lloyd title = The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson - Swanston Edition, Vol. 19 date = keywords = Archie; Attwater; Cauldstaneslap; Christina; Clem; Dand; Davis; Farallone; Frank; Glenalmond; God; Hay; Hermiston; Herrick; Hob; Huish; Innes; Justice; Kirstie; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; Ned; Stevenson; Uncle; Weir; captain; come; good; hand; like; look; man summary = "I''ll tell you, if you like, what I was thinking," said Herrick. Looks Scots," said the captain; and he struck, for his life, "This thing''s got to come to an end," said the captain, with an intake "Look here, my son," said the captain, "this is business, and don''t you "Shake hands, Mr. Herrick," said the captain. "Here," said the captain, "you look sick, old man; have a drop of this." he said; and asked, with a laugh, "Who ever heard of the old man "Here''s Old Man Destiny again," said he to Herrick, "but this time I "Well," said Herrick, "I can tell you (I am afraid) why she came so far "Come and wash your hands," said Attwater, and led the way into a clean, "Here, old man!" said Davis kindly; "this won''t fight, you know! "You are to come along, Huish," said Herrick. "Mr. Herrick, don''t startle a man like that!" he said. id = 59148 author = Riley, Frank title = The Cyber and Justice Holmes date = keywords = Anderson; Cyber; Judge; Professor summary = "Cyber justice!" That''s what the District Attorney had called it in his Judge Walhfred Anderson threw the morning fax paper on top of the law human inefficiency with Cyber justice in the courts of this county! Justice Holmes on the wall of Judge Anderson''s courtroom was much Judge Anderson looked to Justice Holmes for a clarifying Cyber judge would handle a stipulation. Go to hell, Holmes, thought Judge Anderson. As Walhfred Anderson belligerently led the Professor and the D.A. into Walhfred Anderson saw the D.A. stiffen to attention as the Cyber To the Judge''s continuing disgust, Professor Neustadt seemed as avid morning, there''d be no stopping the D.A.''s campaign for Cyber judges. The Judge turned to Cyber IX, then caught himself. Professor''s slip of paper to Judged Anderson. Professor Neustadt strutted up to Cyber IX, flipped on the vocader Professor Neustadt turned to Judge Anderson, and his voice dropped id = 38062 author = Somerville, E. Oe. (Edith Oenone) title = In Mr. Knox''s Country date = keywords = Aisy; Andrew; Bennett; Bill; Casey; Chichester; Daniel; Derryclare; Dr.; Flurry; Fraser; Goggin; Hickey; James; Knox; Lady; Longmuir; Lyney; M''Cabe; M''Evoy; Major; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Philippa; look summary = "We mightn''t want them either," said Flurry, his eye ranging the face "Poor old Mrs. Knox!" said Philippa compassionately, "I thought she "There''s only one room he can possibly have," said Mrs. Flurry, with a As the door closed, the visitor turned to Flurry and said impressively: "God knows," said Flurry, pulling hard at a badly-lighted cigarette and "Come in, Mary," commanded old Mrs. Knox without turning her head; "Well, come in, Stephen," said Mrs. Knox affably, supplementing her "Well, Goggin," said Mrs. Knox, waving towards the hill-side a tiny "There''s the ha''past-one mail-car coming in," said Jimmy; "it''s likely "You can come and help the ladies if you like," said Miss Longmuir, her eyes like an old rat, and looked round at each of us in turn. "Is he any good?" said Flurry to me in a low voice, with his eye on "The McRorys don''t speak English!" said Lady Knox, in a voice like a id = 28980 author = Stephen, Leslie title = The Life of Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, Bart., K.C.S.I. A Judge of the High Court of Justice date = keywords = Act; Cambridge; Church; Commission; Council; Criminal; England; Fitzjames; Footnote; God; Government; Henry; India; James; January; John; Law; London; Lord; Macaulay; Maine; Mill; Miss; Mr.; October; Professor; Rev.; Review; Saturday; Sir; Smith; Stephen; Venn; William; english; history summary = THE LIFE OF SIR JAMES FITZJAMES STEPHEN, BART., K.C.S.I. A Judge of the High Court of Justice SIR JAMES FITZJAMES STEPHEN SIR JAMES FITZJAMES STEPHEN A man of long experience, vast powers of work, and decided views think,'' he says in 1880, ''that I was a heavy old man thirty years ago. Fitzjames says that he took great pains with his articles, and probably ''Evidence Code.'' I hope, says Fitzjames to Sir W. 5. _A Digest of the Law of Evidence_, by James Fitzjames Stephen, Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, K.C.S.I., Q.C. London, 1877, Macmillan by Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, K.C.S.I., one of the judges of the _A General View of the Criminal Law of England_, by Sir James Saturday Review_, by Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, Bart., K.C.S.I. Stephen, Sir James Fitzjames--_Early Life_: Birth, 65_n_, 66; Sir James Stephen on Fitzjames''s literary work, 162-164; Stephen, Sir James Fitzjames--_Last Years at the Bar_: Occupation