[Oscar Wilde, Volume 1 (of 2) by Frank Harris]@TWC D-Link book
Oscar Wilde, Volume 1 (of 2)

CHAPTER XIV
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The English are very proud of their sense of justice, proud too of their Roman law and the practice of the Courts in which they have incorporated it.

They boast of their fair play in all things as the French boast of their lightness, and if you question it, you lose caste with them, as one prejudiced or ignorant or both.

English justice cannot be bought, they say, and if it is dear, excessively dear even, they rather like to feel they have paid a long price for a good article.

Yet it may be that here, as in other things, they take outward propriety and decorum for the inward and ineffable grace.

That a judge should be incorruptible is not so important as that he should be wise and humane.
English journalists and barristers were very much amused at the conduct of the Dreyfus case; yet, when Dreyfus was being tried for the second time in France, two or three instances of similar injustice in England were set forth with circumstance in one of the London newspapers, but no one paid any effective attention to them.


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