Til K H ESP IS U I AN. li m? ns Shnkcsperc gathcied nil knowledge into poetry, snid of the laws "It Is inc of the best and noblest of human sci ences, n science which docs 'mere to cultivate nnd invigorate the understanding than nil other kinds of learning put together." The lawyer who undertakes to reach results by evading or forsaking the fixed principles of that science, has not reached that degree of attainment which makes htm n worthy member of the profession. The judg who writes opinions or reaches conclusions without the application of the fixed principles of the science of law is but building flimsy castles which will soon be in ruins about him. "Ol all things human," remarked Tacitus, "the most precarious and transitory is a reputation for learning and power which has no strong support ol its own." The law being a science, it demands adherence to its fundamental principles. Who can read the maxims of the law, as collected and illustrated in a single volume by Herb crt liroom, without therein finding the rules that have con trolled the judgments of the greatest jurists? These maxims may be found running through the written opinions of judges from the ruder ages to the higher refinement of the present time, and have fuund a place in the code of every civilized nation. We have reached an age when legal reasoning and the applications of principles in the various sources of litlga" tion occasioned by our increased commerce and national intct course have produced subtleties and nice distinctions hot formerly known, yet those have not dostroyc.l the maxims of the law, but have rendered our accurate acquaintance with them all the more desirable. 1 believe it is as true that an accurate knowledge of the first principles is as imperative in the study of law as in the study of any other science. It is the province of the professor in the law school to see that the mind of the student is drawn to these essential clc incuts in his education and to cull Irom the vast libraries of reports and decisions 'hose cases that illustrate the applica tion of the primary elements and principles of hw to the con travel ted questions between litigants. It is the duty of I he professor to deal with the law as a science, nnd to start the student on the highway towards acquit ing a knowledge of the deep, broad, and fundamental principles of that science. Such is the chief value of a law school. The successful lawyer must love and idealize his profes sion. He must be proud of its history, and exult in the great names that adorn it. Pages from the books of the great law writers should be to him as matters of common know, ledge. Text books by leading authors, such as Hlackstone, Kent and Grcenlcaf, Parsons, Cooley and Pomeroy, must he mastered by the most intense, profound and iudelaligablc ' study. His thoughts must be impressed "and his enthusiasm stirred by the far-reaching power of these writers in applying the fundamental principles of the science of law. I am not speaking of that study which the law student gives to these writers, I refer to the study which the practical lawyer must give in reviewing them. If ever a practicing lawyer comes to feel that he has learned all the law that he desires tu leain, and no longer devotes himself to study except when he may find it necessary in preparing to argue a case in hand, that man has reached the period of decline. Through the thousands- of volumes of reports are scattered opinions written by the greatest judges, which opinions stand out in their majestic and beautiful proportions like the chiseled work of renowned sculptors. It is in the reading of these opinions produced by master minds, that the thoughtful law yer finds how principles should be applied to reach results, to arrive at correct conclusions. The greatest of American judges was Marshall, .whose scholastic opinions have the polish of the most refined litera ture, and the keenest of judicial reasoning. His opinions can always be read with profit and delight. The lawyer who has become familiar with the opinions of Maishall, covering the period of thirty-five years that he presided over the supreme court ol the United States "with native dignity and unprcteudimg grace," has become lamilinr with the manner in which the sciejice of law is made to solve the most difficult questions, by a polished reasoning that commands approval and can provoke no dissent. There have been others approaching near him. We can not omit an allusion to that grand man, the late associate jus tice, Samuel P. Miller, whose penetrating intellect detected at once the impoilant facts in a case, and whose discriminat ing mind seized upon the controlling elements and wont to a conclusion that was invincible and always commanded the highest respect. He was supremely fitted for his exalted judicial position by his solid judgment, and his opinions can always be studied as masterly expositions of the law. There are those now living, on the bench ol the supreme court of the United States, and on the supreme bench in many ol the states, whose opinions brighten and embellish the pathway of the studious lawyer. When it is remembered that no man ever achieved lame or power at the bar until he had practiced and studied law for twenty years or more, it is idle to imagine that one can depend upon superficial study or flashes of genius to make him a competitor with the foremost men of the profession. To become a first class lawyer one must have all the princi ples and elements of law fastened upon his memory, and must have so great a familiarity with the leading text books and judicial opinions that the same may at nil times appear spread out before him, subject to his gaze, as he would look upon a vast landscape, viewing the hills and valleys, the river and small streams wandering toward it, the trees and flowers, all blending in harmonious unison, while from any part of which he may turn for embellishments. It is one thing to knowwh at law I?, and it is another thing to know how to state it to a court. It is still another, and a task cqunlly difficult, to gather facts and to state them to a court and to so arrange and embellish them before a jury so as to produce convictions unci reap results. A lawyer should be a perfect scholar in the field of general literature ns well as in the field of general law. lie should possess knowledge on general subjects. In addition to literature and history, the fine ails, poetry, music, painting, and sculpture should be made to conti Unite to his store of valuable information "l'rom a mind filled with classical imagery and poetic fancies troop metaphors, which fix the fact, rivet the attention and lend a pleasing charm to the speaker's style. Illustrations of this we may find in the speeches of Ers kine, Curran, Pinkncy, Choate and Prentiss, and by listening to and studying the oratory of some of the greatest lawyers of the present day, such as Joseph Choate, 'Robert Ingcrsoll, William Evarts, Thomas J. Samuels, and were it not that I might be thought to flatter I would mention two or more from our own state of Nebraska. The minds of jurors vary as do the tints upon the clouds, and the advocates to remove prejudice and inspire confi dence, must be able to draw the illustrations from the fields of nature, remembering, as Virgil tells us, that "hearts are touched by human things," and he must also employ the pol ished rhetoric found in the classics. Sir Walter Scott's, description of a lawyer's library in Scotland, as found in that charming novel, "Guy Manner ing," furnishes an excellent illustration of the extensive learning necessary o make a successful lawyer. "The well pgwyyaygf Ar"x-v,lwr v3vmmjt in Aiivn'm'i Sftv ' iav n',tjfigrg