tish solicitor; and indeed the British client; cannot be induced to put confidence in anyone who has bee well known as an author。 If he has confined his attention to the writing of law…books; he may be tolerated; though hardly; but if his efforts have been on the imaginative side of literature; then for that man they have no use。 That such a person should bine gifts of imagination with forensic aptitude and sound legal knowledge is to them a thing past all belief。
A page or so back I said that my experience might possibly be of use to others; and already the suggestion seems in the way of proof。 If what I write should prevent even one young barrister who hopes to make a mark in his profession; from being beguiled into the fatal paths of authorship; I shall not have laboured in vain。
Next; I have never been able to gratify a very earnest ambition of my younger years; namely; to enter Parliament and shine as a statesman。 Once I tried: it was at the 1895 election; and I almost carried one of the most difficult seats in England。 But almost is not quite; and the awful expense attendant upon contesting a seat in Parliament (in a county division it costs; or used to cost; over 2000 pounds) showed me clearly that; unless they happen to be Labour members; such a career is only open to rich men。 Also I came to understand that it would be practically impossible for me both to earn a living by the writing of books and to plunge eagerly into Parliamentary work; as I know wel