FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49  
50   51   52   53   54   55   56   >>  
pounds, he insisted that the money should be paid wholly in guineas. Taking these home in a bag, he locked his wife up in a room; knocked her down, opened his bag of guineas, and raining the golden wealth upon her, rolled his Danae over and over in the coin. "And now, Esther," said Job Orton, "thee mayst die as soon as thee pleases: for thee'st had thy wish, and _roll'd in riches_." CUTHBERT BEDE, B.A. * * * * * LAWYERS' BAGS. (Vol. vii., p. 557.) Additional evidence of the fact that lawyers used to carry _green_ bags towards the end of the {60} seventeenth century, is to be found in the _Plain Dealer_, a comedy by Wycherley. One of the principal characters in the play is the Widow Blackacre, a petulant, litigious woman, always in law, and mother of Jerry Blackacre, "a true raw squire under age and his mother's government, _bred to the law_." In Act I. Sc. 1., I find the following stage directions: "Enter Widow Blackacre with a mantle and a _green_ bag, and several papers in the other hand. Jerry Blackacre, her son, in a gown, laden with _green_ bags, following her." In Act III. Sc. 1. the widow is called impertinent and ignorant by a lawyer of whom she demands back her fee, on his returning her brief and declining to plead for her. This draws from her the following reply: "Impertinent again and ignorant to me! Gadsbodikins, you puny upstart in the law to use me so, you _green bag_ carrier, you murderer of unfortunate causes," &c. Farther on, in the same scene, Freeman, a gentleman well educated, but of a broken fortune, a complier with the age, thus admonishes Jerry: "Come, Squire, let your mother and your trees fall as she pleases, rather than wear this gown and carry _green_ bags all thy life, and be pointed at for a tony. But you shall be able to deal with her yet the common way. Thou shalt make false love to some lawyer's daughter, whose father, upon the hopes of thy marrying her, shall lend thee money and law to preserve thy estate and trees." A. W. S. Temple. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE. [By the courtesy of our valued cotemporary _The Athenaeum_, we are permitted to reprint the following interesting communication, which appeared in that journal on Saturday last.] "NEW PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESS. "Henley Street, July 6. "Your insertion of the a
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49  
50   51   52   53   54   55   56   >>  



Top keywords:

Blackacre

 

mother

 

pleases

 
PHOTOGRAPHIC
 
guineas
 

ignorant

 

lawyer

 
complier
 

admonishes

 

fortune


Squire

 

Freeman

 

upstart

 
Gadsbodikins
 

Impertinent

 

carrier

 

murderer

 
gentleman
 

educated

 
unfortunate

Farther

 
broken
 

Athenaeum

 

permitted

 
interesting
 

reprint

 

cotemporary

 

CORRESPONDENCE

 

courtesy

 

valued


communication

 

Street

 

insertion

 

Henley

 
PROCESS
 

journal

 
appeared
 
Saturday
 
Temple
 

common


pointed

 

marrying

 

preserve

 
estate
 

father

 

daughter

 

mantle

 
riches
 

CUTHBERT

 
Additional