| John Dryden - 1808 - 482 páginas
...disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his grave brethren, was laid all along in the dirt ; but all at length arrived safe, without loss of life or limb in the service." J This whimsical fancy of setting grave judges on managed horses, with hazard both of damage and ridicule,... | |
| Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1823 - 426 páginas
...in the riders, there happened some curvetting, which made no little disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his grave...like frolic for the future, and the very next term they fell to their coaches as before." If lie would know in what dress the chancellor sat to administer... | |
| 1823 - 428 páginas
...in the riders, there happened some curvetting, which made no little disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his grave...like frolic for the future, and the very next term they fell to their coaches as before." If he would know in what dress the chancellor sat to administer... | |
| 1823 - 428 páginas
...in the riders, there happened some curvetting, which made no little disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his grave...like frolic for the future, and the very next term they fell to their coaches as before." If he would know in what dress the chancellor sat to administer... | |
| 1825 - 312 páginas
...was laid along in the dirt. But all at length arrived safe, without the loss of life or LAWYERS. 99 limb in the service. This accident was enough to divert...very next term after, they fell to their coaches, as before. I do not mention this as any way evil in itself, but only as a levity and an ill-judged... | |
| Roger North - 1826 - 592 páginas
...in the riders, there happened some curvetting, which made no small disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his grave...the very next term after, they fell to their coaches as before." (Examen, p. 57-) increased : for either of these provinces brought too much upon the shoulders... | |
| 1829 - 538 páginas
...in the riders, there happened some curvetting, which made no little disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his grave...the dirt. But all, at length, arrived safe, without the loss of life or limb in the service." Shaftesbury's judicial merits, however, strange to tell,... | |
| 1831 - 446 páginas
...in the riders, there happened some curvetting, which made no little disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his grave brethren, was laid along iu the dirt : but all, at length, arrived safe without loss of life or limbs in the service. This accident... | |
| Benjamin Martyn - 1836 - 882 páginas
...the riders, there happened some curveting which made no little disorder ; and Judge Twisden, to his great affright and the consternation of his grave brethren, was laid along in the dirt.^j When Lord Treasurer Clifford took the oaths "is sPeech at swearing before him, Lord Shaftesbury... | |
| 1841 - 412 páginas
...disorder. Judge Twisden, to his great affright, and the consternation of his brethren, was laid all along in the dirt ; but all at length arrived safe, without loss of life or limb in the service." (North's Examen. p. 60.) It is a happy thing for the British constitution that, while it has retained... | |
| |