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When the Queen began to reign there was abroad a spirit of criticism of our legal institutions, a sense of impatience with respect to the eulogies of which they had been so long the subject. A generation had grown up that questioned the wisdom, doubted the virtues, of much which Blackstone pronounced the perfection of human reason. The teaching of Bentham, his assaults on English law and its administrators, renewed with unwearied zeal and abiding conviction throughout a long life, had not been in vain. Some of his disciples held high positions at the Bar; some were about to be raised to the Bench.
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'Progress of Law in the Victorian Era', The Times (22 June 1897), p. 14

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