It may possibly be said that this new arrangement will save the pockets of the clients, but what have the Judges to do with that? Does anyone imagine litigation to be anything more than a pastime, at which those who play ought to be content to pay? In a hard winter, when the wolf is consistently at our door, to take the bread out of our mouths in this way, is a proceeding which (pace Mr. Gladstone) takes the cake. I am sure Mr. Goschen will welcome such an expression. In any case I appeal, Sir, through you, from the Judges to an enlightened paying public.
Yours faithfully,
L. Erned Counsel.
102, Temple Gardens, E.C.,
Dec. 6.
Cause and Effect.—A razor and a tabula rasa.
JOHN TYNDALL.
Born Aug. 21, 1820. Died Dec. 4, 1893.