h EMI Ina =i tto TOW*NDAst BM Dkbntotte 444.nillibbNencinber 28.18. CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE : IHE UMW OF A BARRISTER. In the second year of my connexion with the N or thern Circuit, when, even junior briefs were merit less ammo= than acceptable,lwas ngree- t bly surprised as I sal _musing on the . evening of thy arrival in the ancient city of York, upon the c apncietut mode in which-those powerful persona- r cef , the attorneyte, distribtited their valuable bvors, ;. f the entrance of one of the most eminent of the - i re practising in that part of the country, and the q ; pith wittie s t' . of a bulky brief in the Crown court on which, as my glance instinctively fellon interesting figures, I perceived that the large ve , is criminal cases, of filly guineas was marked The local newspapers, from which 1 had occasion= ally seen extracts, had been for some time busy w ;ti the ca.e : and I knelt,' it therefore to be, rela. ..teiy to the condition in life of the princij al per ,on implicated. an importa3t one. Ru.nor had 0 ..- ..:sted the conduct of the defence to an eminent eider of the circuit—since one of our ablest judg- es. and on looking - more closely at the brief, I per ire i that that gentleman's name bad been cross oat. and mine h.ubstituted. The fee also—a agiecable alteration—had been, I sac, a-ttles'ably reduced: in acconlark'e. dontule F s, !•, Ito , attorney's appreciation of the difference t.i,ue between a silk and stuff gown. .11.qi are not sir. 1 helies'e, retained for the pros the crown against Everett r• s4id Mr. :1 f. husiness manner. o% Mr !..3rpe." :r7 r.t.e. I beg to ieinzer yon the leading - ,l.o.,le:ence. It was intended, as you per- V.ice it in the hands of our oreat pri hut he be so completely- occupied 13r. that he has been compelled to declMe ti n.,•:,; toned tou : and from what I have r•otra at you in several cases. I have no nn uniorninate client will have ample jus t, o;:t- ;nnt Mr. Kings;on will be with you!' • i ! Mr Sharpe tar hi= compliment, and ;t• brief As the commission would be • ~1 ing morning. I at once applied ~e 0 , .• • a perusal of the bulky paper, aided as Pn he the A et'oa.l exptanationa and commentaries Mr. Sharpe. Our _conference lasted several and it was arranged that another should be "e“.l early the next morning at Mr Sharpe's office, whica Mr Kingston would assist. r. iemely sensitne, as, under the circiamsfan es. I must necessarily have been, to the arduous ro-e of the vase duties so unexpectedly devolved - cnn me. the iollowing, ttzume of the chief inci gf :he clDe :as confided to me by Mr. Sharpe, v4l, I think. frilly account to the reader for the -^rvott: trritabt:lty under which I for the moment .itored Mr Frsdenvir Everett, the prisoner about to be 'i-aifned before a jury of his countrymen for the crime of murder, haJ. with his father, I, A-Amoy Everett, resided for several yearn e a: Woodlands :NtanorLilouse, the seal of Mrs. Ferhugh, a rich elderly maiden lady, aunt :1-4 and sister by marriage to the last taam .:- lf-ran. A 4,eneteti.. pteus, high-minded "Mr. Fitzhilah was represented to hate been fil , en•ely tiensiiive 'that on the score of The 'Fitzlinghs of Yorkshire, she was •-• it) " came in await the Coriquerer, - any branch of the glorious tree, then firmly : ti the god of En7lanti, that degraded Itself an alllawe ‘r,-a7lh, beauty, 9r worth, `‘eilma utlhout 11,e pale of her narrow priejmit c, wa*ittexotably cut oti from her atlections, and ss far as she was 1!4. hoin her memory nie—the prim of tS.,r :.enders—had been Fitzhi:l;it_ her yr:Lin t z. tair, gentle, and only •,stel'. fa I.::er distiaiii and sligh• of the elipity ance