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VIII Beyond Bread and Butter
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Published:April 2008
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Abstract
To me there is more joy than pain, by a good deal, in the thorns of such a thicket as that through which I have just dragged you. And as the tonic iodine burns in the wounds and beneath the skin the whole body tingles with that curious bubbling sense of muscle pleasure, there comes again the thought: for too much law, more law will be the cure. If law makes blind, more law will make you see.
But more law of what kind? More of the bread and butter kind, of the straight trade dope? That turns, I fancy, on how you conceive your trade. There is a bony structure of technique without which you will be a feckless artisan—worthless, and unsuccessful. Those hard bones you must have. You must assemble them into a whole, each in its place, each one articulated with the rest. When that is done you can refine somewhat on the articulation, get joints to working neatly. But I do not know that extra bones will bring much vision to the eye sockets of a skull.
It all depends on what you want of law, what law can offer you. That turns, in turn, on what you want of life.
There is a brand of lawyer for whom law is the making of a livelihood, a competence, a fortune. Law offers means to live, to get ahead. It is so viewed. Such men give their whole selves to it, in this aspect. Coin is their reward. Coin makes it possible to live. Coin is success, coin is prestige, and coin is power. Such lawyers, I take it, reflect rather adequately the standards of our civilization. They have perceived the mainspring of a money economy. They follow single-heartedly on their perception. Coin is, in this society, the measure of a man.
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