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1ST BARON See also: lord chief See also: justice of See also: England, was the eldest son of See also: Sir See also: John
See also: Taylor
See also: Coleridge
.
He was See also: born at Heath's See also: Court, Ottery St Mary, on the 3rd of See also: December 182o
.
He was educated at See also: Eton and Balliol See also: College, See also: Oxford, of which he was a See also: scholar
.
He was called to the See also: bar in 1846, and went the western circuit, rising steadily, through more than twenty years of hard See also: work, till in 1865 he was returned as member for Exeter in the Liberal See also: interest
.
The impression which he made on the heads of his party was so favourable that they determined, early in the session of 1867, to put him forward as the protagonist of their attack on the Conservative See also: government
.
But that move seemed to many of their staunchest adherents unwise, and it was frustrated by the active opposition of a section, including Hastings See also: Russell (later ninth duke of See also: Bedford), his See also: brother Arthur, member for See also: Tavistock, See also: Alexander
See also: Mitchell of See also: Stow, A
.
W
.
Kinglake and See also: Henry Seymour
.
They met to deliberate in the
See also: tea-See also: room of the See also: House, and were afterwards sometimes confounded with the tea-room party which was of subsequent formation and under the guidance of a different See also: group
.
The protest was sufficient to prevent the contemplated attack being made, but the Liberals returned to power in See also: good See also: time with a large majority behind them in 1868
.
Coleridge was made, first See also: solicitor-, and then attorney-general
.
As early as 1863 a small See also: body of Oxford men in parliament had opened fire against the legislation which kept their university bound by ecclesiastical swaddling clothes
.
They had made a good See also: deal of progress in converting the House of See also: Commons to their views before the general election of 1865
.
That election having brought Coleridge into parliament, he was hailed as a most valuable ally, whose See also: great university distinction, brilliant success as an orator at the bar, and hereditary connexion with the High See also: Church party, entitled him to take the
See also: lead in a See also: movement which, although gathering strength, was yet very far from having achieved See also: complete success
.
The clerically-minded section of the Conservative party could not but listen to the son of Sir John Coleridge, the godson of See also: Keble, and the See also: grand-See also: nephew of the See also: man who had been an indirect cause of the See also: Anglican revival of 1833,—for John See also: Stuart See also: Mill was right when he said that the poet Coleridge and the philosopher Bentham were, so far as England was concerned, the leaders of the two chief movements of their times: " it was they who taught the teachers, and who were the two great seminal minds."
Walking up one evening from the House of Commons to dine at the
See also: Athenaeum with Henry See also: Bruce (afterwards Lord See also: Aberdare) and another friend, Coleridge said: " There is a trial coming on which will be one of the most remarkable causes celebres that has ever been heard of." This was the Tichborne See also: case, which led to proceedings in the criminal courts rising almost to the dignity of a See also: political event
.
The Tichborne trial was the most. conspicuous feature of Coleridge's later years at the bar, and tasked his See also: powers as an advocate to the uttermost, though he was assisted by the splendid abilities and industry of See also: Charles (afterwards Lord)
See also: Bowen
.
In See also: November 1873 Coleridge succeeded Sir W
.
See also: Bovill as chief justice of the See also: common pleas, and was immediately afterwards raised to the See also: peerage as Baron Coleridge of Ottery St Mary
.
In 188o he was made lord chief justice of England on the See also: death of Sir Alexander See also: Cockburn
.
In See also: jury cases his quickness in apprehending facts and his lucidity in arranging them were very remarkable indeed
.
He was not one of the most learned of lawyers, but he was a great deal more learned than many See also: people believed him to be, and as an ecclesiastical lawyer had perhaps few or no superiors
.
His fault—a natural fault in one who had been so successful as an advocate—was that of being too See also: apt to take one See also: side
.
He allowed, also, certain political or See also: personal prepossessions to colour the See also: tone of his remarks from the bench
.
A See also: game-preservinglandlord had not to thank the gods when his case, however buttressed by generally accepted claims, came before Coleridge
.
Towards the end of his See also: life his See also: health failed, and he became somewhat indolent
.
On the whole, he was not so strong a man in his judicial capacity as See also: Campbell or Cockburn; but it must be admitted that his scholarship, his refinement, his power of oratory, and his character raised the tone of the bench while he sat upon it, and that if it has been adorned by greater judicial abilities, it has hardly ever known a greater combination of varied merits
.
It is curious to observe that of all
See also: judges the man whom he put highest was one very unlike himself, the great master of the rolls, Sir See also: William
See also: Grant
.
Coleridge died in harness on the 14th of
See also: June 1894
.
Coleridge's work, first as a See also: barrister, and then as a See also: judge, prevented his See also: publishing as much as he otherwise would have done, but his addresses and papers would, if collected, fill a substantial See also: volume and do much honour to his memory
.
One of the best, and one most eminently characteristic of the man, was his inaugural address to the Philosophical Institution at See also: Edinburgh in 1870; another was a paper on See also: Wordsworth (1873)
.
He was an exceptionally good letter-writer
.
Of travel he had very little experience
.
He had hardly been to See also: Paris; once, quite near the end of his career, he spent a few days in See also: Holland, and came back a willing slave to the
See also: genius of See also: Rembrandt; but his longest See also: absence from England was a visit, which had some-thing of a representative legal character, to the See also: United States
.
It is See also: strange that a man so steeped in See also: Greek and See also: Roman See also: poetry, so deeply interested in the past, See also: present and future of See also: Christianity, never saw See also: Rome, or Athens, or the See also: Holy See also: Land
.
A subsidiary cause, no doubt, was the fatal See also: custom of neglecting See also: modern See also: languages at See also: English See also: schools
.
He felt himself at a disadvantage when he passed beyond English-speaking lands, and cordially disliked the situation
.
No See also: notice of Coleridge should omit to make mention of his extraordinary store of anecdotes, which were nearly always connected with Eton, Oxford, the bar or the bench
.
His exquisite See also: voice, considerable power of See also: mimicry, and perfect method of narration added greatly to the charm
.
He once told, at the table of Dr See also: Jowett, master of Balliol, anecdotes through the whole of See also: dinner on Saturday evening, through the whole of breakfast, lunch and dinner the next See also: day, through' the whole journey on Monday See also: morning from Oxford to See also: Paddington, without ever once repeating himself
.
He was frequently to be seen at the Athenaeum, was a member both of Grillion's and The See also: Club, as well as of the See also: Literary Society, of which he was president, and whose meetings he very rarely missed
.
See also: Bishop See also: Copleston is said to have divided the human See also: race into three classes,—men, See also: women and Coleridges
.
If he did so, he meant, no doubt, to imply that the See also: family of whom the poet of Christabel was the chief example regarded themselves as a class to themselves, the See also: objects of a See also: special See also: dispensation
.
John Duke Coleridge was sarcastic and critical, and at times over-sensitive
.
But his strongest characteristics were love of liberty and justice
.
By See also: birth and connexions a Conservative, he was a Liberal by conviction, and loyal to his party and its great See also: leader, Mr Gladstone
.
Coleridge had three sons and a daughter by his first wife, Jane Fortescue, daughter of the Rev
.
See also: George Seymour of See also: Freshwater
.
She was an artist of real genius, and her portrait of See also: Cardinal Newman was considered much better than the one by Millais
.
She died in See also: February 1878; a See also: short notice of her by Dean Church of St See also: Paul's was published in the See also: Guardian, and was reprinted in her See also: husband's privately printed collection of poems
.
Coleridge remained for some years a widower, but married in 1885 Amy See also: Augusta See also: Jackson Lawford, who survived him
.
He was succeeded in the peerage by his eldest son, See also: Bernard John Seymour (b
.
1851), who went to the bar and became a K.C. in 1892
.
In 1907 he was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court
.
The two other sons were See also: Stephen (b
.
1854), a barrister, secretary to the See also: Anti-See also: Vivisection Society, and See also: Gilbert
See also: James Duke (b
.
1859)
.
His Life and
See also: Correspondence, edited by E
.
H
.
Coleridge, was published in 1904; see further E
.
See also: Manson, Builders of our See also: Law
(1904) ; and for the See also: history of the Coleridge family see Lord Coleridge, The See also: Story of a Devonshire House (1907)
.
(M . G . |
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