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All About Our World

John Marshall and the Constitution
Corwin

Page 265 of 265

amount of material brought together in Gustavus Myers's "History
of the Supreme Court" (Chicago, 1912) is based on purely ex parte
statements and is so poorly authenticated as to be valueless.  He
writes from the socialistic point of view and fluctuates between
the desire to establish the dogma of "class bias" by a coldly
impartial examination of the "facts" and the desire to start a
scandal reflecting on individual reputations. 

The literature of eulogy and appreciation is, for all practical
purposes, exhausted in Dillon's collection.  But a reference
should be made here to a brief but pertinent and excellently
phrased comment on the great Chief Justice in Woodrow Wilson's
"Constitutional Government in the United States" (New York,
1908), pp.158-9. 

End of Project Gutenberg's John Marshall and the Constitution, by Corwin 


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