Showing posts with label judges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label judges. Show all posts
Tuesday, 26 March 2013
A sort of atmospheric pressure
‘Are you saying,’ said Mr Franklin grimly, ‘the trial was rigged?’
‘You’re a bigger ass than I thought you were, if you believe that,’ said Sir Harry. ‘Of course it wasn’t. It didn’t have to be. This isn’t America, where you have to slip a thousand dollars to a congressman or a judge to get things done. You’re a new country; things ain’t settled yet. But here — things aren’t rigged. Look at Button — her father’s a lord, connected to God knows who. She’s my great niece, and I’m half-Paget, and my sister-in-law married a Rothschild, and among the lot of us I dare say we’re connected to half the criminal upper-classes — you don’t “rig” things because you don’t have to. There’s a sort of atmospheric pressure that causes things to go properly and fittingly. Button couldn’t go to jail unless her family washed their hands of her — which they would, like a shot, if it was murder or high treason. But smashing pictures? Hardly. And it isn’t rigging, you see. You couldn’t rig a British judge and jury nowadays, not if you tried.’
Mr American, p.430, Pan Books, paperback edition 1982.
Tags: Flashman, Flashman quotes, rig.
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Life at the American bar
He was a Switzer, though American-born, named Kagi… He’d been a teacher, and had fought in Kansas, where he’d distinguished himself by shooting a judge — who in turn put three slugs into Kagi, which gives you some notion of what life at the American bar was like in those days.
Flashman and the Angel of the Lord, p.229, Harper Collins, 1995.
Tags: Flashman, Flashman quotes, judge.
Friday, 6 February 2009
Education and evil-doing
‘Well, now,’ says Lincoln, ‘why not? Some of the greatest villains in history have been educated men. Without that education they might have been honest citizens. a few years at college won’t make a bad man virtuous; it will merely put the polish on his wickedness.’
….’Why at this rate, you will equate learning with evil-doing,’ cries someone. ‘What must your view be of our leading justices and politicians? Are they not virtuous men?’
‘Oh, virtuous enough,’ says Lincoln. ‘But what they would be like if they had been educated is another matter.’
Flash For Freedom!, p.127, Pan edition, 8th printing, 1980.
Labels:
Abraham Lincoln,
bad,
college,
education,
evil,
judges,
politicians,
villain
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