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What the Judge Saw: Being Twenty-Five Years in Manchester by One Who Has Done It cover

What the Judge Saw: Being Twenty-Five Years in Manchester by One Who Has Done It

Chapter 42: Letters from Dorothy Osborne to Sir William Temple.
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About This Book

A senior jurist offers a collection of reminiscences about twenty-five years spent practising in Manchester, combining legal memoir with social observation. He outlines his student days and progress to the bar, records courtroom scenes from quarter sessions to capital trials, and profiles fellow judges, lawyers, and civic personalities. Alongside procedural detail he sketches local theatres, municipal affairs, and everyday urban life, using humor and anecdote to evoke changing streets and institutions. The essays blend practical reflections on law with personal memories of place, friendship, and the idiosyncrasies of northern civic culture.

Crown 8vo.  Illustrated.  350 pp.
Price 6s.

Presentation Edition, White Vellum, 6s. net.

Letters from Dorothy Osborne to Sir William Temple.

Pall Mall Gazette.—“We trust the new and beautiful issue of an ever-fragrant book will give it yet more readers and lovers than it has had before.”


Butter-Scotia,
Or a Cheap Trip to Fairyland

180 pages. With a Map of Butter-Scotia, many full-page Plates and Illustrations in the Text. Bound in specially designed Cloth Cover. 6s.