[The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln by Francis Fisher Browne]@TWC D-Link book
The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln

CHAPTER VIII
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He had the ability to seize the strong points of a case and present them with clearness and compactness.

His power of comparison was great.

He rarely failed in a legal discussion to use this mode of reasoning.

Yet he knew practically nothing of the rules of evidence, of pleading, of practice, as laid down in the text-books, and seemed to care little about them.
Sometimes he lost cases of the plainest justice which the most inexperienced lawyer could have won.

He looked upon two things as essential to his success in a case.


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