The Works of Sir William Jones, Volume 9J. Stockdale and J. Walker, 1807 |
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Page 8
... court where the great boundaries of property are not only dif- tinct and visible , but irrevocably fixed , where nothing is vague or precarious , nothing left to discretionary interpretation , but where Your predeceffors wifely ...
... court where the great boundaries of property are not only dif- tinct and visible , but irrevocably fixed , where nothing is vague or precarious , nothing left to discretionary interpretation , but where Your predeceffors wifely ...
Page 24
... court ; in marshalling their evidence ; in difpofing and enforcing their observations ; in digreffing without deviation ; in returning to the subject without abruptnefs ; in amplifying ; in aggravating ; in extenuating ; and , as Diony ...
... court ; in marshalling their evidence ; in difpofing and enforcing their observations ; in digreffing without deviation ; in returning to the subject without abruptnefs ; in amplifying ; in aggravating ; in extenuating ; and , as Diony ...
Page 40
... court of HELIEA , the only one of the ten , which my present subject leads me to confider . A more minute account of a lawsuit at Athens , from the original process to final judgement , would have been fuperfluous in this place , and ...
... court of HELIEA , the only one of the ten , which my present subject leads me to confider . A more minute account of a lawsuit at Athens , from the original process to final judgement , would have been fuperfluous in this place , and ...
Page 41
... courts of ju- dicature ; but , inftead of wafting time in fruit- lefs regret , I proceed to discourse concisely on the same subject by the help of fuch imperfect light as remains . It is almoft needless to premife , what every person ...
... courts of ju- dicature ; but , inftead of wafting time in fruit- lefs regret , I proceed to discourse concisely on the same subject by the help of fuch imperfect light as remains . It is almoft needless to premife , what every person ...
Page 42
... court of juf- tice , his first step was to prefer his plaint and de- nounce the name of his adverfary to the fitting magiftrate , who examined the complainant , and , if he thought the action maintainable , permitted him to fummon the ...
... court of juf- tice , his first step was to prefer his plaint and de- nounce the name of his adverfary to the fitting magiftrate , who examined the complainant , and , if he thought the action maintainable , permitted him to fummon the ...
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adopted fon affert Afide Aftyphilus againſt alfo alſo Apollodorus Archon Athenian Athens becauſe Bráhmen brother cafe caufe cauſe Charidemus Ciron claim Cleon coufin court damfels daugh daughter deceaſed defcended defire Demochares Demofthenes depofitions Dicæogenes difpute Dufbm Dufhm eftate Endius eſtate Eubulides Euctemon Eupolis faid fame fatal ring father favour fecond feems fhall fide fifter fince firft firſt fome foon fortune fucceffion fuch fuit fuppofe fupport Hagnias heir himſelf houſe huſband Ifæus inheritance judges juftice juſt king Leochares Mádh marriage married Mát Menexenus Mifr minas moft moſt mother muft muſt myſelf neareſt obferved occafion paffage perfon perfuaded Philoctemon Phylomache pleaſed pleaſure poffeffed poffeffions prefent Priyamvadá publick purpoſe Pyrrhus raiſed reaſon reſpect Sacontalá ſeems ſhall ſhe ſhould ſome ſon ſpeak ſpeech Stratocles ſuch thee thefe themſelves Theopompus ther theſe thofe thoſe thou tion uncle uſed ward whilft whofe whoſe wife witneffes Xenocles