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George Rose (barrister)

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Sir George Rose (1 May 1782 – 3 December 1873) was an English barrister and law reporter, a master in chancery.

Quotes

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English Epigrams

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Reported in William Davenport Adams (ed.) English Epigrams (London, [1878])
  • Samuel Warren, though able, yet vainest of men,
    Could he guide with discretion his tongue and his pen,
    His course would be clear for—"Ten Thousand a Year,"
    But limited else to a brief—"Now and Then."
    • On Samuel Warren, Author of Ten Thousand a Year, Now and Then, and other Novels"
  • Why should Honesty seek any safer retreat
       From the lawyers or barges, odd-rot-'em?
    For the lawyers are just at the top of the street,
       And the barges are just at the bottom!
    • "Reply to Smith"
    • [First printed in Barham's Life of Hook (1849), in reply to the following epigram by James Smith, "On Craven Street, Strand":
      In Craven Street, Strand, ten attorneys find place,
      And ten dark coal-barges are moored at the base:
      Fly, Honesty, fly, to some safer retreat;
      There's craft in the river and craft in the street.]
  • O thou who read'st what 's written here,
    Commiserate the lot severe,
       By which, compell'd, I write them.
    In vain Sophia I withstand,
    For Anna adds her dread command;
       I tremble—and indite them.
    Blame Eve, who, feeble to withstand
    One single devil, rais'd her hand,
       And gather'd our damnation;
    But do not me or Adam blame,
    Tempted by two, who did the same—
       His Wife—and her Relation.
    • "Written in an Album"
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