University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE)

 - Class of 1897

Page 73 of 125

 

University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 73 of 125
Page 73 of 125



University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 72
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University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 74
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Page 73 text:

PREPARATION FOR THE STUDY OF LAW tion, but at times every lawyer will End that his only way to suc- cess lies across the term fincognizfa, and he must have the intellec- tual courage to lead the way, and the skill to make it so plain that even the conservative court may find sure footing on which to follow. . lVhat preparation should then precede the study of the law? The conditions of success at the bar are very different from what they were a century or even a half century ago, and these con- ditions are every year growing more exacting. Many started in the law forty or fifty years ago with but meager preliminary pre- paration, and have reached high places in the profession, who -could not start now with like preparation and ever hope to reach the same relative rank. Success in the study and practice of the law now demands long and thorough preparation. It demands a broad foundation in good general scholarship. I do not mean that one must necessarily hold a college diploma before studying law. He may hold that and yet be very deicient in the rudiments of a good general education. True, the college or university is the best place in which to acquire a good general education, but it is by no means the only place where it can be had. Many of our great lawyers whose general education was broad and thorough, were not college-bred men. The practice of law touches life at every point, and with the growth of our civilization the demands upon the lawyer are nec- essarily more varied. There is no held of human knowledge into which his work may not lead him. There is no science, a knowl- edge of whose principles may not be of importance to him. It is the business of the advocate to enforce his ideas upon the court and jury. No one can ever hope to rise to the rank of even a second-rate advocate who has not acquired the art of clear and forcible expression. It is true, that to some nature has denied the power to ever acquire this art, but it is likewise true that she has denied to them the possibility of ever becoming great advocates. No one should, however, lay the blame entirely upon dame na- ture until he has made heroic efforts to accomplish his end. There are many examples of great power of expression acquired only after obstacles apparently insuperable were overcome. VVhile the power of clear, forcible expression is, to some extent, a

Page 72 text:

Dreparation for the Stubg of Siam BY PROFESSOR HENRY H. WILSON A question of supreme importance that should receive the care- ful consideration of every young man is the choice of the voca- tion in which he is to do his life's Work. Many circumstances will justly have influence in the decision of this question. But circumstances often unconsciously have too much influence in this respect. Too often mere chance influences are allowed to lead one into this or that business Without any deliberate choice having been made and with no consideration of onels fitness for it. While everyone's surroundings and circumstances should receive due consideration in the choice of his vocation, he should not al- low himself to clvqjzf into any vocation merely by suffering him- self to go in the direction of the least resistance. His choice may often be influenced, and sometimes even con- trolled by circumstances, yet his life's Work should be entered upon by deliberate choice and not become the unconscious result of circumstances. Next in importance to the choice of a vocation in life is the means of entering upon it With the best possible chances of ultimate suc- cess. It ought not to be necessary to say that certain natural qualifications are necessary to success in almost every vocation in life. That one has been successful in one line of Work is no assurance that he would not have failed in others. No young man should ever look forward to the practice of law Who has not in him the element of intellectual pugnacity. Litigation is still to a greatnextent trial by Wager of battle. The contest is no longer physical but intellectual. Courts and juries are human, and often find it difficult to resist the contention of a bold, persistent, aggressive, intellectual athlete pleading for the life, liberty, or property of his client. Usually the lawyer Ends the precedent for his clientis conten-



Page 74 text:

68 THE DIGEST natural gift, yet nature can be much assisted by thorough gen- eral education and acquaintance with the best English writers- One unconsciously acquires something of the style of expression- of the authors whom he reads. A wise choice of English prose may do do much-to improve one's style of expression. The speeches of great orators may often be studied to advantage by those who wish to improve in public speaking. lVhile true elo- quence is essentially a natural gift, the power of clear and forci- ble expression is an art capable of successful cultivation. It is not so much in the acquisition of knowledge as in the in- tellectual training that thorough, general education is a necessary prerequisite to the successful study and practice of law. One- cannot delay entering upon the study of law until he has mas tered the science of medicine, merely because his first case may be one of malpractice, nor can he wait to master civil engineer- ing, because he may at once be called upon to try a case in- volving the proper construction of a railway bridge, but he ought not to enter upon the study of law until by long, per- sistent and patient study of other things he has acquired that power of mental concentration and endurance that will render' success in the study of the law probable. In all schemes of edu-- cation there are certain branches of knowledge that are permit- ted to be taken only after certain preliminary preparation has been made. This is because without such preparation there is no reasonable hope of success in them. The law isdihicult and abstruse, and the young man whose education is limited to the three Ris- ought not for his own good, as well as that of the public, to be permitted to enter upon the study of law with a view to its prac- tice. It is not contended that all well educated meniwould make- good lawyers, but it is true that no man will ever be likely to- reach high rank as a lawyer without a fair general education acquired either in or out of the schools. An efort is being made by the law schools of the country to' raise the requirements, as to the general education of the appli- cants for admission to their classes. So long as no preliminary preparation is required for oflilce reading with a view to being' admitted to the bar, such a movement among the law colleges is likely to defeat its own purpose. Its purpose doubtless is to

Suggestions in the University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) collection:

University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 64

1897, pg 64

University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 106

1897, pg 106

University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 42

1897, pg 42

University of Nebraska College of Law - Yearbook (Lincoln, NE) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 42

1897, pg 42


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